Conversations with Tyler - David Robertson on Conducting, Pierre Boulez, and Musical Interpretation
Episode Date: July 9, 2025David Robertson is a rare conductor who unites avant-garde complexity with accessibility. After serving as music director of the Ensemble Intercontemporain, Pierre Boulez's storied contemporary-music ...ensemble, he went on to rejuvenate the St. Louis Symphony. Robertson combines a fearless approach to challenging scores with a deep empathy for audiences. Tyler and David explore Pierre Boulez's centenary and the emotional depths beneath his reputation for severity, whether Boulez is better understood as a surrealist or a serialist composer, the influence of non-Western music like gamelan on Boulez's compositions, the challenge of memorizing contemporary scores, whether Boulez's music still sounds contemporary after decades, where skeptics should start with Boulez, how conductors connect with players during a performance, the management lessons of conducting, which orchestra sections posed Robertson the greatest challenges, how he and other conductors achieve clarity of sound, what conductors should read beyond music books, what Robertson enjoys in popular music, how national audiences differ from others, how Robertson first discovered classical music, why he insists on conducting the 1911 version of Stravinsky's Petrushka rather than the 1947 revision, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video on the new dedicated Conversations with Tyler channel. Recorded March 12th, 2025. Help keep the show ad free by donating today! Other ways to connect Follow us on X and Instagram Follow Tyler on X Sign up for our newsletter Join our Discord Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Learn more about Conversations with Tyler and other Mercatus Center podcasts here. Photo Credit: Chris Lee
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Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I'm happy to be here in New York City with David Robertson,
who is one of my favorite classical conductors.
In the year, I think, 2003, I went to hear David in Paris at Ircom,
and I've been thinking about him and what he does ever since.
He served as principal conductor of the ensemble Intercontemporaine from 1992 to 2000,
has been chief conductor in Sydney, Australia,
music director in St. Louis, where he's credited with having revitalized that symphony,
and he is very well known for his numerous recordings,
including those of John Adams, Pierre Boulez, George Gershwin, and much more.
He teaches at Juilliard, and he conducts regularly at the Metropolitan Opera in New York,
and this summer he's conducting with the New York Philharmonic an exciting concert featuring Stravinsky's Petruska 1911 edition.
David, welcome.
Thank you very much.
Now, as we both know, it's the 100th birthday of Pierre Boulez on March 22nd,
and we're recording just a few days before then, and you studied with Boolez.
I didn't actually study with him.
That's, in a sense, that was the benefit of coming to him relatively late.
I went to London to study in 1976 at the Royal Academy of Music.
And of course, that was when Boulas was no longer the chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra,
but he still had a very strong relationship with the organization.
So he came a lot, and I got to see all sorts of amazing concerts at a very formative period of my life.
Later on, I figured out how to get into the studio where the BBC Symphony Orchestra rehearses,
and so I would go to rehearsals that he had. And he was always very nice, and he would say hello
when he saw, you know, this stranger sitting in the back of the room. But I never had the courage
to speak to it. He had this reputation of being a bit severe and uncompromising. You think that's
wrong? I think that he came of age in a period that was fraught with all sorts of
musical challenges.
And I think his, as he often used to say, I'm Capricorn, so I'm very stubborn.
And so I think that he was somewhat combative as a young man.
And I got to know him, you know, we never had a sort of filial relation.
We had a grand filial, if I can call it that.
And so, you know, your grandfather looks at you and is very forgiving of all of the things
that you do which are silly.
And I think this was the nice relationship
that I had with him when he asked
me to take over the ensemble
intercontemporas, but we'd had really
almost no contact beforehand.
His music is very emotional.
Do you think he's more properly thought of
as a kind of surrealist composer
rather than a serialist?
I think that because he doesn't wear
his or never wore his emotion
on his sleeve in any way,
that many people,
and also with this extraordinary sort of emphasis on precision that was connected with his performing.
There was a sense that, you know, one of the headlines in a New York paper announcing his arrival at the New York Philharmonic was the Iceman cometh, right?
And I think there's that sense of things.
But while I can understand where that came from, I never really saw that side of him.
And in fact, what was fascinating, doing a number of his works, I remember in Japan,
I had given the, I was lucky enough to fall into the opportunity to give the world premiere of Explosant Fix.
And that was because he had knee problems.
And so the tour that we had made for Italy and Germany, he was just not going to be able to do because of waiting around for airplanes.
And it was extremely painful.
But so I got to rehearse the piece with him in the hall.
I'm right behind at all of the computers, and I heard him rehearse it first with the ensemble and work things out.
And so that was fascinating both to see someone working with players and have a clarinet player say, you know, this actual tremolo between these two notes doesn't work very well.
And to have, you know, the man that I would think of is supremely knowledgeable about writing for instruments, say, oh, well, you know, if we did this one, would it work better?
and the player says, yes, sure, that's fine.
And to see this kind of flexibility with his own works,
and then to be up in front conducting
and having the computer create the sounds in real time
based on what the information that the MIDI flute was giving it.
And for me to say, you know, Pierre,
I think it's actually just a little too fast for us to be able to...
And he said, oh, just a minute, just a minute,
we'll make the calculations.
And so he calculated everything,
so it would be slightly slower.
And I turned with some chagrin to the ensemble
and said, do you know how we recalculate the tempo?
And I just gave an upbeat.
So this was one of the things that, you know,
we worked on this together in a sense.
It was very close collaboration.
But then about two years later,
for a big birthday celebration in Tokyo,
I was doing a performance of it in Kiwi Hall.
And we got to the slow central passage of Transitoir 7,
which is the first movement of Explosante Fix.
And I remember thinking, this is so incredibly sensual,
and it sounds so beautiful in this hall,
I'm going to really push the envelope.
And so I think Pierre's tempo marking is quarter note equals 40,
which is quite slow.
But I was down almost at the double of that,
like eighth note equals 40.
And it was just, it was like the most unbelievably
sort of seductive,
revelian kind of sound
that you could imagine.
And after the rehearsal,
you know, Pierre was there
and I went up to him
and I said,
Pierre, I'm very sorry,
I really indulged in the slow section
and he said,
no, no, no,
d'aventage,
you can actually do more.
No, you can actually do more.
And that was the moment
where I realized
he has no problem
when the emotion
is put into his works
in an immensely intense way.
But he,
He is not able to do that himself as a performer.
And so there are a lot of his works where I, you know, have done things in his presence, which he doesn't do.
And you won't find it on his recordings.
And he said, oh, yes, that's really very nice.
That's lovely.
So it's a fascinating question, this one of how does one express emotion and how comfortable is one with emotions in public?
And your recording of, say, notation seven, you think that's more emotional than his recording?
recording of the same piece?
You know, I haven't listened to either of them.
I actually prefer yours.
But I...
His is almost overly rigorous.
Right.
And one of the things that's interesting
that I found often is, you know,
and I know this from my own
paltry experiences as a composer,
you get very nervous
when your piece is being played, right?
It's this moment where it's almost
like sending your child
onto the Little League field
where all of the parents are watching and oh my goodness what's going to happen now
and so there is a kind of a nervousness and that frequently I think for composers
translates into if I just do this faster or if I just do this with more energy
and yet sitting and listening to it one has a completely different experience of the piece
than when you are necessarily in the driver's seat and so you know we did the notation
Seven with Pierre in Lyon.
And so he heard all of that, and there was no sense of, no, no, no, you shouldn't do this like that.
It's a fascinating thing working with composers, not only with Pierre, but with all sorts of different composers because of that sense of, here's what it sounds like in my head, not in an acoustic, not with real players who are putting things in.
And in fact, one of the difficulties I've found with composers who work with electronic sounds,
electroacoustic music, and with live performers,
is that they constantly feel that the live performers are inflecting their music with something new
and allowing it to develop, whereas the thing that has been worked out, however,
sophisticated in the electronic area, lies there inert while,
the living musicians move along.
Now, there's some non-Western influences in Bouléz's music,
gamelan music and the notations.
How do you prepare for those?
Do you go listen to Gamelin or you just ignore it and focus on Boulets?
You know, I think the answer is both, right?
The interesting thing, so for example, in the work Cyransis,
as well as in the seventh notation,
which are about the same sort of gestation period,
there are steel drums.
And this is not a sound you would not.
necessarily immediately think that Pierre would be drawn to. And yet the story behind it is that
when he was quite a young man, he became responsible for the musical side of the René-Berreux
theater company. And this was a company that the French government used in the aftermath
of the Second World War to tour around a great deal and to some extent to show what was
happening in French culture, in this case in theater.
And so Pierre got to go to all sorts of places that at the time were totally not touristic.
And he remembers flying, you know, with they gave you wax to put in the ears when you flew over the Andes and little tubes with oxygen would come down that you would put in your nose.
I mean, all sorts of things like this that give it a real character.
And he happened to be in the Caribbean.
And he was walking along the beach.
And this was before Club Med or anything like this.
So there were no tourists.
And as he was coming along the shore, he was.
kept hearing this sort of strange sound, and as he got closer, these were steel drum players.
And this sort of sound always stayed with him. And I think this is similar to the experience
of many French composers where all of a sudden Agamalam is brought to the Paris exposition,
and it completely changes the idea of what you think of as sound coming in. And this is a constant,
right? The African masks and Picasso and Prague and the whole idea of,
of changing the perspective of things in cubism.
So there's so much in Pierre's music that is about his paying attention and listening all the time,
whether it's to Scottish bagpipes to work out this idea of,
oh, wait, the chanter has all of these tiny little notes that it plays,
and they have very specific rules for how they play these.
I like this idea, and I'm going to sort of bring it into my music.
And you, cognitively, can you memorize these scores or shall I call them tunes the way you could with Beethoven or Brahms, or is that just impossible for everyone?
You know, when I first got to the Ensemble Lainte Contemporain, which was 1991, and this is unusual in that I think they were probably desperate to find a music director.
Peter Uttvich had said, no, I am not going to extend anymore.
And so Pierre happened to find me.
and the interesting thing was he nominated me
and gave me the job as music director
and I had never conducted the ensemble before.
So that was slightly daunting, shall we say, to go in.
But what that meant was that at the end of my first season,
we had a tour, and we did a fabulous sort of production
of Le Marto-Sormantre with the Ballet Chopino,
Regine Chopinot, Ballet Atlantic,
with this fabulous choreography
to the Marteau Saint-Metre, which meant I needed to conduct it.
And so I came in, and I realized that my first Marte-Sormantre
was going to be the 293rd that the ensemble was playing.
So my first couple of seasons, I felt like I was drinking from a fire hydrant.
At the same time, what was interesting working with that group
is that they brought the kind of deep knowledge of his chamber
music of his whole repertoire that you might find in a great symphony orchestra with regard to Beethoven.
And so you automatically start imbibing all of these different sort of ideas.
And what ends up happening is that, so for example, for Explosante Fiques, that's a work that
has lots of shifting patterns, but it's written in mosaic form.
And sometimes to help the audience understand that, I will.
talk to them at the beginning and give musical examples,
which requires me to look at the audience with my microphone
and conduct the group that is behind me
with the score behind me at the same time.
And I could do the whole piece by heart,
and I prefer by heart rather than from memory
because I think that the notion is that,
like any kind of music,
it means so much to you that there's no
way you could forget it in the same way that you can't forget your parents' names because they
have volumes of experience and love and connection that are attached to those names. And that becomes
the same way in a piece that you really love dearly as some of the Boulas speaks to me.
Or the time signatures of these works just crazy?
No, they're all, the interesting thing is Pierre, I mean, essentially,
Not that there's the law of the excluded middle,
but essentially composers use two basic ideas
when they're going to notate their music.
One is to take a certain amount of time and subdivided.
So this would be like,
dumb, bum, bum, ba, ba, pa, pa, pa, pa, pa, pa, pa, pa, pa, pa.
And there are many composers who do that.
And then there's the idea that you have, say,
a group of eighth notes or 16th notes that form an underlying pulse.
This is very much coming from the Indian subcontinent.
And so you have this thing going,
and that's why the notation in Tresi de la-téé de-da-da-da-dha-ta-dha.
And that's why the notation in Tres de l'Elturgis,
which that comes from the second movement of Olivier Messian,
requires those differing time signatures,
because otherwise if you measure it by a grid,
everything else that doesn't fit in the grid
becomes a syncopation
and there's nothing wrong with this
this is what is so wonderful about
the kind of grid that jazz players
are able to manufacture
where there's so much push and pull
with the grid and that's actually
where a great deal of the energy comes from
at the same time for Pierre
there are many pieces in which
for example the second mosaic piece
at the beginning of Memorial
or the original last
movement of Explosontics.
But ta-ta-t-t-t-t-tit-da-ti-ta-tit-da-te-ta-ti-----tete-ta-ti--ttttttt, you can't really do that in a strict meter.
It's one-two-three, one-two-three, one-two-three, one-two-three, one, two, four, five, six, seven, eight.
And if it, if you tried to sort of push that into a box, it would be a little bit like trying to take a very beautiful flower and squishing it down into a little sort of glass case,
where the whole reason you like the flower is because it has these sort of expressions of space that otherwise are cut off.
Now, a lot of Pierre's music now is fairly old. Does it still sound contemporary?
That's an interesting question. And I'm not sure that it's possible to give a really compelling and satisfactory answer.
And the reason for this is that I think contemporary is a very movable feast,
and it has to do with what it is you've experienced.
So someone might listen to a piece of Pierre's from, say, the 1950s.
I'm thinking like the first sonata for piano or the sonatine for flute and piano,
and think of that as very contemporary, whereas someone else who has been involved in contemporary,
contemporary classical music for want of a better term for the last 60 years,
we'll hear that and say, oh, that's very dated, right?
And so this is one of the sort of challenges.
My sense in any piece of music that I play is to try and make it,
regardless of when it was written, contemporary in the sense that it speaks to us now,
because we are contemporary, right?
So when I'm doing Mozart, I'm not expecting the audience to come in a horse and carriage and have, you know, sort of knee breaches and then to die from appendicitis on the early side.
Right. So there are lots of things that one does. And I think that from that point of view, there are certain works of Pierre that have become kinds of classics.
Like the second piano sonata, which doesn't sound dated.
No, and at the same time, you know, it sounds, for certain people, it has a kind of surface complexity that will immediately cut lots of people off.
I have a sort of a nice mixtape that I play to my conductors to sort of put this idea across with not very many words.
And it has everything from reggae to ACDC to Bruce Springsteen to.
the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, to, you know, a Schubert lead, a Beethoven string quartet,
a gamelan, some kabuki music to, you know, Indian sitar, Raga.
And it's all put together with a maximum of 2.5 seconds.
Sometimes they're even shorter.
And the whole reason for this mixtape and that I played to the conductors is to get them
to understand that whether or not you feel musically sophisticated, the speed with which your brain
decides, ah, yes, for me, no, not for me, is very, very quick. And that's one of the things
that I think we as performers and programmers have to take into account when we're deciding
to do something. So, for example, the little introduction that I do to Explosante Fix is because
if I start with Transitouin 7, which feels a little bit of.
bit like you take your seat in the concert hall and suddenly it's transformed into one of the
runways at JFK and there are large Airbus 300s coming in right over your head. It can be a little
bit scary. Whereas if I start with the delicate part of the piece, which is at the end and give them
a couple of things to think about, all of a sudden there's enough context that that airport runway
experience makes sense within the whole thing. And so I think that's where this idea of what is
for each individual audience member is a tricky one to generalize about.
This may be too difficult to question, but believe it or not, a lot of my listeners do not love
contemporary classical music.
Gee, what a surprise!
If you just had to explain to them shortly why they should listen to Bouléz, are you conducting Boulas?
What's the pitch?
The pitch is basically that every artist has a unique way of viewing the world.
and they express it through music.
And part of that experience is the history of what's come before them
and how they deal with that history and what they see around them at the moment.
So, for example, there are people who have incredible senses of pitch.
I'm thinking of the composer George Benjamin or the late Peter Etvich,
who if they hear a pitch can tell you how,
many sense it is above the normal one that you would play on the piano. And it's just uncanny to me,
because I can't do that. At the same time, when I'm listening to music, and maybe this is the
residual of being a recovering horn player, I hear the overtone structure of pitches. I have realized
much more than many of my musical colleagues. It's not that they don't hear them, but it doesn't
enter into their calculation of what's important in music. So each composer has these particular
unique experiences that they've had as a musician. And then they use that with their own imagination
to come up with ideas that they hope are saying something that is unique and that has not been
said before. And what this means is that similarly to what happened in,
in poetry in the 20th century and in our century,
all of a sudden it feels as the rules
which we used to be able to hold on to
when we were listening to something
that was new and with which we were unfamiliar
are suddenly broken down
and it feels like a free-for-all.
And so what do I do?
And then different people's
comfort with discomfort
is something that I think contemporary classical music really deals with.
So there are ways of listening where you can sort of take in the whole thing
and say, but I tend to like music that is more consonant.
And I can find you a whole group of contemporary composers who agree with you,
who like consonant music.
Then there are other people who say,
I find that in my sort of philosophical outlook, much consonant music that's being written today feels like it's somehow a compound.
That actually reality is a much trickier and nastier beast.
That's how I feel usually.
To grab hold of it, you need to use language that doesn't somehow apologize for that complexity.
And there are a number of composers I could give you in this way.
I will say that my own background is one where I am slightly prejudiced against things that are ultra-complex.
And I have spent much of my life being convinced after engaging with the work that there's much more and that I should reserve judgment before I really start to understand things.
With what Boulash peace should a skeptic start?
Oh, I would say start gently with a piece like Memorial, where they're the kind of sound world. It's for solo flute, it's for a small string ensemble, and two French horns. The sound world is delightful. And at the same time, it is a piece that has a very strong emotional tenor. It's it really is. It really is.
a memorial for beloved member who was quite young when he died from the Ensemble Lain de Gondemois,
who was working very closely with Pierre on developing the MIDI flute.
In other words, a flute that a player could play like a normal flute and it would be able to interface with the computer.
And he passed away very suddenly and so Pierre took one of the sort of fragments that he had
written around the Memorial of Stravinsky
and wrote this piece for flute,
originally for flute solo.
And in trying to work on the piece for its premiere
at Memorial Concert for Lawrence Beauregard,
the flutist, he and Sophie Charié felt that something was missing.
And so overnight, he wrote this accompaniment part
for the strings and the two horns.
And it is an absolute jazz.
and at five minutes, it won't take too much out of your time and you won't feel as though you have spent your time incorrectly.
I have some general questions about conducting.
How is it you make your players feel better?
Oh, I think the music actually does that, right?
Could you smile at them, you occasionally wink or just encourage them or what is it you do?
You know, I think the thing that's fascinating is the, I think we're enormously privileged to be able to play music, right?
It's best summed up by John Cage's phrase, Happy New Year's.
So when I'm in the sort of situation with musicians, whether it's a rehearsal or a concert, there is that sense of wonder that sound can communicate meaning.
And so we are speaking in sound all the time.
And that means that if a player plays something that's really wonderful,
the recognition of that, I feel, falls principally to the conductor
to reflect that out to the rest of the musicians.
There's an unwritten rule in an orchestra that you don't turn around and look at somebody,
even if they've played something great.
And so I think that part of our job is to,
to show the rest of the players, gee, how great that was.
And part of the flexibility comes from if, let's say, the oboe player has the read from God tonight,
that if they want to stay on the high note a little bit longer or the soprano at the Metropolitan Opera,
that you just say, yes, let's do this.
This is one of these magical moments of humanity, and we're lucky to be a part of it.
And when do the players look at you?
Oh, that's a fabulous question.
And I'll now have to go public with this
because the funny thing is
every single individual in an orchestra
looks up at a different time.
It's totally personal.
There are some people, they look up a whole bar before,
and then they put their eyes down,
and they don't want any more eye contact.
There are other people who look as though they're not looking up,
but you can see that they're paying attention to you
before they go back into their own world.
And there are people who look up right before they're going to play.
And one of the challenges for a conductor is as quickly as possible with a group you don't know
to try and actually memorize when everybody looks up.
Because that's like, I always say this is like the paper boy.
If you're on your, or the paper girl, might as well, if you're on your route and you have
your papers in your bicycle satchel and you throw it at the window and the window is closed,
you'll probably have to pay for the plane of glass.
Whereas if the window goes up,
which is the equivalency of someone looking up to get information,
that's the moment where you can send the information through
so that with your hands or your face or your gestures that you're saying,
maybe try it this way.
And they pick that information up and then use it.
But the thing that no one will tell you
and that the players themselves don't often realize
is that instinctively, and I think subconsciously,
almost every player looks up after they've finished playing something.
I think it's to just check in to see, am I in the right place?
But that is a personal moment where the orchestra is thinking about what's coming, right?
They're not thinking about what's behind because you're constantly in the present and the future.
But that's your moment to send a message to somebody which can be, oh, wow, that was incredible.
And that sense of maestro came to my house is really one of the things I think that helps build this kind of communication and trust between the players.
We recently did a concert, one of the recreation of one of Pierre's rug concerts.
And there were a couple of notes that people played in the Vabran Symphony, which is very hard and very austere.
And, you know, you only play one note and then you have four bars where you can,
chastise yourself because that note didn't come out just as perfectly as you wanted it to.
And those are moments where the communication with the conductor, I think, is just essential
because that's what keeps the whole thing alive and full of meaning.
So that's a skill a conductor needs to have that even a great musician might not have.
Right.
What would be another skill a conductor needs to have that a great musician might not have?
Oh, you know, I think you need to feel.
comfortable with being sometimes looking slightly foolish. I had a wonderful mentor and colleague
named Janos Furst who started out as a violinist, grew up in Hungary. In 56 he crossed the
sea from Hungary and Austria and then was a wandering person until he managed to find a spot in
Ireland and then London. And he taught conducting and I was fortunate enough to be his assistant
in a summer course in Ireland.
And Janos would often say to people,
imagine the moon view that there's some extraterrestrial
who's come to observe the earth
and thinks that a safe distance to do this is from the moon
because you don't want to get too close,
you don't know how these people are going to behave.
And he sets up a telescope,
and the telescope is trained purely by chance
on an orchestra room
where there are all of these people looking like
they're trying to saw through something with a bow and people who are going red in the face with
these sort of yellow instruments that they're playing. And there's this one person who's just
holding a little stick and waving their arms like crazy. And all of a sudden the moon view
makes you realize that being the one person not making sound in the room is a little ridiculous.
And I think that's something that sometimes, you know, not taking ourselves too seriously,
is something that is hard for some musicians.
Having been a music director, you're also a manager of sorts.
What is it managers can learn from conductors?
Oh, you can only do your job by listening.
That's the only way to do the job.
And it looks as though you are somehow imposing your will on other people.
You're not at all.
You're much more, I think, my father was a research engineer.
And so it's, although I didn't have the mathematics skills to follow him into that.
sort of those domains. It's fascinating to me in the latter part of his life. He was often managing
these brilliant scientists, many of whom were phenomenal at what they could do, but they couldn't
necessarily figure out how to do things together. And so your job is to figure out how to harness
all of the collective artistry that's right in front of you and manage to get it to move in the
same direction. And so yes, sometimes there are decisions that you need to take, like any manager,
right? And it may be as simple as a short-term decision. Tomorrow morning, let's rehearse this
and start with this, and then we'll go to this other piece after the break. Or it may be a
long-term decision, such as what are we going to play in the coming seasons that help develop
the orchestra, or it may be a decision that impacts the orchestra for 25, 30, 40 years that
you won't be involved with anymore as when you give tenure to a particular player in the orchestra.
But all of these things and the efficacy of them is based on your ability to really deeply listen to what is going on and listen to the different points of view.
Which part of the orchestra do you have the most trouble with?
Oh, I'd never thought about it. I don't really think.
I think at the beginning you tend to have the most trouble with the instrument, with the instrument,
or the group of instruments with whom you have the least practical experience.
So when I was first starting out as a 21-year-old,
the idea of telling a brass and woodwind section,
let's breathe here, felt far more comfortable
than turning to the first violin and saying,
what would that be like if we started it up,
and then with time, you gain a greater understanding of what's going on.
I mean, this is why the work with the Ensemble Anticontemporas for nine years, for me, was absolutely formative because there are two things.
One is, when Boulas founded this group, he made it so that each one of the players was considered a soloist.
It was an ensemble of 31 soloists, and their contract was modeled on the soloist's contract in an orchestra, which is usually closer to two-thirds of the time, so that they're not playing.
every single piece, every single week,
because they need the time to keep themselves,
like a great sports player, a tennis player, or a gymnast in top form.
And so there's lots of practice that's going on on the side.
So that's one aspect of it.
And then the other aspect was that when I would come into a rehearsal
and you have composers pushing the envelope,
there would be times when I would think,
well, you can't possibly play this on the instrument.
And they would say, oh, yes,
you can if you do this this way.
And so they would show me a fingering
or they would show me a combination of
the position on the string instrument
or a type of circular breathing on the woodwinds
in such a way that I felt I was getting a masterclass
in every single instrument.
And what's been fascinating is to be able to,
and this is the heart of music in itself
as a tradition where you give on the things
that you've gotten from those before you.
I would get to orchestras, and the percussion player would say,
no, I don't think you can do this.
And I would say, well, try it this way.
And oh, yeah, right?
Because they haven't necessarily come across something like that.
So most of my knowledge I owe to the members of the Ensemble and the contemporar.
Now, many of my favorite conductors, Boulez himself, you, Masaki, Suzuki.
You can attain this incredible clarity of sound,
which seems distinct from simply the quality of the orchestra.
Right.
And how is it you all do this?
that. Well, it's very funny you should say that because that's one of the things that I always found
fantastic listening to Pierre, either in a concert or a rehearsal or a recording. And I once asked him,
I said, how do you get such incredible clarity? And he said, oh, it's very simple. And I must,
as an aside, I must say that one of the things Pierre often said in the most complex situations
would be to preface it with,
it's very simple.
It became a joke at the ensemble,
you know, Pierre, how do I do 13 in the time of 17?
And he would say, oh, it's very simple.
And so that was the standard go-to line.
But he said, it's very simple.
You make sure that you have very clearly
what you want to hear in your head.
And then, even without realizing it,
you will instinctively do what is necessary
to make sure that you hear it.
And he is absolutely right.
So that for me, having worked with composers and struggling with writing music myself,
I think very long about how I'm going to put something down on the page.
And this precise instrument, that detail.
I mean, John Adams used to say that you have just reams of details in a score.
And so I, as an interpreter of someone else's music,
I try to take all of that with as much sort of precision and good faith as possible that they didn't just do it willfully.
And therefore, I think if they want to hear something, they have put it in there in the score.
And it seems inconceivable to me that we wouldn't try and make sure that it's heard, even if it would seem, ah, well, the bassoons have the trombones blaring right behind them.
therefore we won't hear the bassoons.
No, if there are moments when Yanatchek just leaves out the bassoons, great.
But if the composer has put the bassoons in there, if it's Berlioz and he's got his four bassoons and his trombones,
and they're all playing Fortissimo, then you have to figure out what is necessary to make sure that the bassoons don't just hang up their instrument and go home when it gets to that passage.
And it's true that without doing this consciously, you immediately bring the trombones down or you bring the trombones down or you bring
the bassoon's up or you set the orchestra up differently. There are all sorts of ways that you can
accomplish what's necessary, but I think the fundamental idea is every person in the orchestra,
like every person in an ensemble of soloists, is equally important and their viewpoints are
equally valid. And your job is to figure out how to take all of that and synthesize it so that you
have a unified whole that has as much clarity as possible. To be a great conductor, what is it you
need to read in fiction or history or other non-musical areas, anything, a lot?
You know, I had trouble as a reader when I was a kid, and I was born in a family of
very fine readers. So I felt very, I had a very low sense of self-esteem in that regard.
And at the time, this was before people talked about legistonia or dyslexia or, and so forth.
and it was hard for me to read, and I managed to work it out through reading plays,
because in most plays there's a great deal of space around the text.
And all of a sudden I found that that space allowed me to process things easier.
And a few years ago I came across a book by Dr. Marilyn Wolf called Proust and the Squid.
And in this book, she talks about the fact that the squid has a very simple nervous system.
So it is possible to study all sorts of aspects of it.
This is the same reason that molecular biology uses things like sea elegance, the nematodes,
because you can figure out what's happening.
You can turn off this particular cell and see what does that do to the animal.
Well, it turns out, unlike Proust, who is the quintessential reader,
there are people who have difficulty reading,
and there are squid that cannot swim when they are born.
And a squid that cannot swim when it is born dies.
And so the fascinating thing when you study these particular squid who have this anomaly
is that they don't use the normal neural pathway to the muscles.
They have to build one which is entirely unique.
And her whole book then talks about people and situations in which,
which the relatively recent experience of reading text for Homo sapiens is something that the
majority of people do in a certain neurological way. But there are others for whom, whatever
reasons, those neural pathways are not open to them. And so they need to build something
different. And so part of my experience of reading plays and having this space was going slowly
through something in a play
I could put all the rest of the
information in without
having to think at all about
expository writing or
descriptive. It's a
forest and I would imagine the forest
and then I would have the things.
I grew to love reading
and was passionate about it
and my reading has been very wide-ranging
so I'm a real hard ass
at Juilliard
and I make my students
I assume that they've all read Charles Rosen's The Classical Style.
I assume that they have a favorite orchestration book.
But for the class, I make them read all of, I'm afraid,
George Steiner's After Babel, which is about translation
and the whole process of taking something from one situation,
in this case, one language, into another language,
what you can carry across and what gets in the famous phrase lost in translation.
And then I make them read the words we use of Jackson and McAulov because, you know, the metaphors we live by, because that's one where we tend to speak and we haven't ever necessarily looked at the language we're using and what it communicates.
I make them read someone that you've had on the podcast before, Daniel Kahneman, making fast and slow.
Because this is one of the things, so much of what we do, I think, is.
in conducting is actually the real hard crunching of data that system one takes care of,
and system two that thinks it's in charge is really just coming late to the party,
you know, like 50 milliseconds late, but it thinks it's still in charge.
So it's a little bit like the BBC show, Yes, Minister, which is very amusing.
But these things one has to understand.
And then sometimes we will talk about.
you know, which books are the ones that formed you and which, you know, whether it's
you're reading history or whether or not you're reading literature of the time or literature
of your own time. But I think the broadest possible reading list and experiencing list,
whether it's theater going to plays, going to movies, going watching something on television,
everything in your experience, if you're a musician, I think,
translates into your art.
And that means that, you know, you can come to it in many different ways.
You're very well known for working with younger conductors.
As you observe the flow of them over the years, do you think they're reading less as a whole
and they need more encouragement?
How's that evolving?
You know, I'm going to boomer here.
I think that part of the thing is that we've had a really fundamental shift in society
with the age of smartphones.
The internet was already the first sort of major move in that direction,
but the idea that you have essentially a supercomputer in your pocket
is a huge change,
and I have no idea how that's really going to affect things.
But I think the challenge for us in what we call classical music,
for want of a better term,
is the idea of long form.
And that has phenomenal rewards, but it is dealing with what is seen as a very scarce resource, which is attention, and its concomitant aspect time.
And so I think that one of the things that one needs to learn to do for young conductors is to, in a sense, kind of slow down and learn about yourself.
and that can be done through books,
and much of it is done through contemplation of the score,
whatever that score might be,
whether it's written by a man in Leipzig 300 years ago,
or whether it's something that was written yesterday
by a person who is trying to wean themselves off of social media as you are.
What do you enjoy most in what might be called popular music?
Another bad term,
but you know what I mean.
Yeah.
Oh.
I guess the thing that I like the most is kind of surprise.
And that can be surprise when it's, you know, Tracy Chapman singing by herself.
Or it can be Jay Dilla figuring out a way to kind of juice the rhythm machine in such a way that the rhythm has this kind of lilt,
which is both not possible without a machine first,
doing it, but then immediately becomes something that we humans want to be involved with.
Or it may be the voicing of a chord that you hear from a guitarist, whether it's, you know,
Joni Mitchell or whether it's, you know, John Mayer. I mean, there's so many different things,
but it's this aspect, I mean, time is limited. So one of the things that I enjoy is
not telling a lift Uber or taxi driver to turn off their music, but to use it as a kind of
John Cage-in moment. I do that too. Yeah. Learn something. Yeah. And so sometimes you experience things
and occasionally it will be, I remember being in a taxi in Milano over a long ride very late at night
after rehearsal and, you know, listening to a song that was
completely out of context, and yet made perfect sense about someone staring at the Rhine River in Dusseldorf.
And you have this sense of the curious thing that music can do, which is to collapse time and collapse space and collapse distance between souls.
and that part, whether it's in popular music
or whether it's in what the Germans like to call
serious music,
which is so pejorative to the light music.
It's crazy.
And this is one of the things I can't walk around with any kind of pod in my ear.
So I tend to, if I listen to something, I listen to something.
Because when I'm walking around, the street sounds,
whether those are cars, whether they're annoying, or whether they're beautiful, like a sudden bird song, in a lull of traffic.
All of these things are things I want to experience.
And I don't want to sort of shut myself off from that because the randomness that this can generate can have a butterfly effect in us and suddenly take us to a different place.
And so all of a sudden, the squeak of two breaks, suddenly you find your brain has,
shuffled the jutebox and you have a piece of music you haven't thought of in years
because that particular interval just fired a couple of neurons that, you know, got some extra
protein with breakfast.
You conducted for some number of years in Sydney.
How are Australian audiences different?
Oh, that's a really good thing to talk about because I think all audiences are different.
There are certain cultural aspects, right?
So I just came back from a European tour.
The amount of applause you get from European audiences is sometimes surprising to Americans.
I remember having to tell some American soloists when we'd come out for the seventh time
and they'd already played their encore that the audience still wanted to see them again in Lyon.
That was not something that you have a standing ovation in Carnegie Hall and you come out twice and then it's over.
In Sydney, I guess there is a sense of adventure.
There's also a sense of pride in their institutions that you don't necessarily find in every place
so that there's a sense of, there's enough newness about the country that the idea that it's the Sydney Symphony Orchestra is already a source of pride before you've even started to play.
So there's that, but I think the more important point is that an audience anywhere is a collection of individuals.
And we play a concert for one individual, but for economic reasons, we just get 2,000 individuals together at the same time because it's cost effective.
But each person brings their own sense of what's there.
and their experience with them.
I mean, this goes back to what you were saying about, you know,
people hearing contemporary classical music and going ick.
And that has to do with, have they played an instrument?
When they've played an instrument,
are they the kind of person who likes to make funny sounds on the instrument,
or do they want to stick with only what's in the tune a day book?
And if they're, you know, the person who like to honk
and make strange sounds to annoy their siblings,
they're probably going to be closer to, you know, contemporary music,
and they bring that with them into the concert hall.
You know, you have people who are there to celebrate a fantastic, I just met this person and I invited them to the concert and they said, yes, oh, this is great.
You know, can I put my arm around them during the Chikovsky?
And you have people who come in and they have just, they are still in a situation of bereavement.
And you have people who come in and they have looked at something in the news that has disturbed them greatly.
And so all of these people come in.
all of them as individuals.
And our job, I think, is to create the most open experience possible
so that each one of these people feels they can come into the structure of the music
in a way that they can then find themselves
and have the incredible experience that it can bring forth, talk to them.
As a kid, how did you first discover classical music?
How did it click for you?
Oh, I heard Bach on public TV.
Yeah, I mean, I'm not sure in some of the other languages that I've learned later as a young adult on an adult, I can tell you specifically where I learned, you know, which train platform I was standing on when someone corrected me and I learned this word in this language for the first time.
But in my mother tongue, there's no way I can go back and say when I learned water, right?
Clearly, it was there at some point.
But the thing with the classical music is we had all sorts of music growing up.
I was from a, you know, probably what would be considered a middle-brow household.
My dad played Dixieland jazz on his clarinet badly, as he would say.
He also played guitar and banjo.
And my mother sang and played piano because every, you know, young lady should learn
to play piano. It was that kind of an upbringing. And so there were everything from, you know,
church hymns to music that was known through musicals or from jazz and then, you know,
music appreciation records, which we had. So there were all sorts of different things. And I can't
actually say when I, you know, became besotted with it. I started, I was fortunate to grow up
in the Santa Monica Unified School District where they had a wonderful music program.
They still do, but this was before Proposition 13 in California.
So it was, as many other cultural things were beautifully funded.
And I started singing in the choir at the age of six
and then started instrumental music in the school at the age of, let's see, nine,
and then just went on from there.
So I don't, I can't really say, I do have an early men.
memory, we bought a Panasonic tape machine real to real, and we only had one tape. And that tape was,
I now realized later at the time I didn't pay any attention, was William Steinberg and the Pittsburgh
Symphony Orchestra doing Bolero and Rhapsody Español. And I don't think the Rhapsody Español of Ravel
made any impression. But Bolero, I do remember actually listening to it and being able to hear that that's the
same melody now but with a different
color, right? And I must have
been seven.
And I, you know,
was just besotted with music
from the very early start.
Your summer concert with the New York
Philharmonic, why do the 1911
Petrushka and not the 1947?
Oh,
Patrushka is an interesting
case as many of the works of Stravinsky
and it has to do with
World War I and international
copyright.
Stravinsky made a small version of the Firebird, which is referred to as the Firebird Suite, 1919, because it was published in 1919.
And this was in the aftermath of the First World War.
And I think he received some money for the actual score from the publisher, but he never, in the rest of his life, received any rights from this piece.
And it's the piece of his which was played the most during his lifetime, and to some extent still is.
And so when the Second World War came along and he had found refuge in the United States,
he realized, you know, I need to revise a number of my work so that I can get the copyright.
And so some of the works were made more practical,
and some of the works were done entirely for financial reasons.
So there's a revision of Persephone, his cantata for chorus and solo as vocal
solo as an orchestra, and he changed one note in the second bassoon part. But in Petrushka, he changed a lot.
And one of the things that happened was that there's a large piano part in the early part of the
work, and then the piano never plays again. This comes from him thinking while he was working with
Yajalev that he wanted to write a piano concerto, and so these sketches for the piano concerto came in.
The woodwind section is reduced. The number of harps is reduced to one. There are no
of things that are done with tempos to make it easier to conduct. So, for example, one of the
temple relations, which I really like, is that the opening theme of the Shrode Tide Fair has
Tari-pah-da-da-da-da-da-da, and it has a sort of eighth-note pulse, and the horns going,
so he wants at one point to just up the tempo a little bit, and that means that he would like
seven eighth notes in the time of these six, which means one and two and two, three, four, five, six, seven, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, one, two, three, one, two, three, one, two, three, one, two, three, one, two, three, one, two, three, and that's hard for conducters to do. So, in the 47 version, he sanctions, which I think was probably because he would also like to conduct it, because you make money conducting. And so he turned it into eighth note equals eighth note. And I find this is a very, a very,
sad way of doing things.
And Boulez and I talked about
this and he said,
ironically, it will turn out,
when you are looking at a composer's works,
always trust the original.
And he never
did the 47, or very rarely.
And I've done it occasionally and I always feel,
oh, why did I agree to do this?
And I go back to insisting on the
1911. The colors are much
better and the actual
sort of beauty
of the orchestration, where it comes
from in the Russian tradition with Rimski Korsakov,
that's all much clearer and much more evident in the way you hear it.
And of course, going back to Boulas, he revised his works all the time.
And so I find it wonderful that a composer said, oh, no, trust the original.
And yet, you know, he would never say, go back to the original of Visas Nipcial.
And at the same time, I can understand this because
there are times when you say,
ah, you know, I did put the metronome
mark too fast, or actually
that trumpet part
would work once on a month of
Sundays, but not normally. So let
me be more practical here.
It's been a pleasure. David Robertson.
Thank you very much. Thank you.
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