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    Blending jazz & classical

    One time at band camp: Friends come together in Texas Music Festival big bang concert opener

    Joel Luks
    Jun 8, 2013 | 12:00 pm

    It's often said that music brings people together.

    Some prefer to take this adage a step further, making bold claims to the likes of music being a universal language, music as a bridge that dissolves cultural differences and on and on. Heck, if you recall the days of "We Are the World," apparently music can solve daunting global issues. I'll leave that up to you to ponder the possibilities of the art form, though I'm certain you can tell from my air of sarcasm that I prefer not to take things too seriously when it comes to tuneful matters.

    I do, however, believe in the lasting power of close relationships.

    Think back to your days as a camper in some sort of bucolic setting far away from home. Other than a couple of designated visitors' days, the parents are nowhere in sight. You explore your personal limits, try new things, crush on your cabin counselor, chant Kumbaya in the warmth of a bon fire, partake in the required water sports . . . how much fun did you have?

    Not to compare the Immanuel and Helen Olshan Texas Music Festival, which targets mostly college-age music students, to a teen summer camp experience, but the mechanics of how people bond through intense escapades don't change one bit with age. The addition of such a personal aesthetic pursuit atop the close quarters of the month-long classical music program, which runs through June 29, is a formula for forging bosom buddies joined at the hip — musically speaking.

    Take the "Celebratory Opening" concert, set for 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Moores Opera House. One of the pieces in the program that also includes Benjamin Britten's Fanfare for St. Edmundsbury, selections from Tchaikovsky's The Sleeping Beauty and Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring typifies how people connect through music. I guess you could say the story starts with "this one time at band camp. . . "

    "I thought Matt was a typical wise guy from Long Island. But after having the opportunity to perform with one another, there were some very strong musical synergies."

    Mark Anthony Turnage's Fractured Lines: Double Concerto for Percussion and Orchestra was written for Peter Erskine, a jazz drummer who performed with Steely Dan and Weather Report, and Evelyn Glennie, a deaf percussionist active in the solo circuit. The piece is based on a melody by Erskine scored in a style implied by the reference: A tad of classical and plenty of popular music allusions, drum set included.

    TMF faculty members Matthew Strauss and Ted Atkatz come together to perform the big bang showcase.

    One time at band camp . . .

    Atkatz, a graduate of the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston and Temple University in Philadelphia, resigned from a tenure position with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra to have the freedom to go after more creative pursuits. He's the founder and front man of NYCO, an alternative rock group based in Chicago, while teaching at the Lynn Conservatory of Music in Boca Raton, Fla.

    Strauss, who holds a degree from the Juilliard School, has been a core percussionist with the Houston Symphony for nine years. He spent two seasons as a member of the percussion section of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra alongside Atkatz beginning in 2002. But their friendship dates back almost 20 years prior to that. The two met in the mid-1980s while studying at the New England Music Camp in Maine and reunited a decade later at the Tanglewood Music Center.

    "I thought Matt was a typical wise guy from Long Island," Atkatz jokes. "But after having the opportunity to perform with one another, there were some very strong musical synergies."

    Knowing your collaborators heightens the ability to play expressively, not unlike being able to finish someone else's sentences.

    "Music is certainly a language," Atkatz explains. "When you know how your partner communicates, it makes music-making so much more rewarding. In rehearsals, a concerto like the Turnage comes together quicker than if we didn't understand how the other plays — and that's when the fun begins."

    Strauss describes the musical exchanges as effortless, particularly in shaping phrases and timing entrances and releases, something that's particularly critical when dealing with instruments with such defined front to the sound. There's little room for error in the initial attack as any discrepancies in coordination aren't just obvious — they can be disastrous.

    "We can take more risks in performance knowing that we are synched," Strauss continues. "Isn't that what we all want: Fresh, energetic music?"

    As a teacher, Strauss hopes that his students develop the same type of relationships he did while refining his artistic skills.

    "Programs like the Texas Music Festival are where you meet your friends and colleagues, the ones who will continue to have impact throughout your professional and musical career," says Strauss.

    __

    The Texas Music Festival presents "Festival Orchestra 1: Celebratory Opening" on Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at the Moores Opera House. Tickets are $15 for the general public, $10 for students and seniors, and can be purchased online or by calling 713-743-3313.

    Percussionist Ted Atkatz resigned from the Chicago Symphony to pursue other creative endeavors.

    Texas Music Festival opening concert preview June 2013 Ted Atkatz musician with sticks
    Photo courtesy of Texas Music Festival
    Percussionist Ted Atkatz resigned from the Chicago Symphony to pursue other creative endeavors.
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    Movie Review

    Timothée Chalamet cements star status in new movie Marty Supreme

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 23, 2025 | 4:30 pm
    Timothée Chalamet
    Courtesy
    Timothée Chalamet

    In a time when true movie stars seem to be going extinct, Timothée Chalamet has emerged as an exception to the rule. Since 2021 he has headlined blockbusters like the two Dune movies and Wonka, and also earned an Oscar nomination for playing Bob Dylan in A Complete Unknown (his second nomination following 2018’s Call Me By Your Name). Now, he’s almost assured to get his third nomination for the stellar new film, Marty Supreme.

    Chalamet plays Marty Mauser, a world-class table tennis player living in New York. But reducing Marty to his best skill doesn’t do him justice, as he’s also a motormouth schemer who will do almost anything to achieve his dreams. He doesn’t have any qualms about wooing married women like neighbor Rachel (Odessa A’zion) or actress Kay Stone (Gwyneth Paltrow), or hiding his true ping pong skills to win money in scams with friends like Wally (Tyler the Creator).

    Marty is seemingly on the go the entire movie, whether it’s trying to convince Kay’s millionaire husband Milton Rockwell (Kevin O’Leary) to fund his table tennis ambitions; or trying to track down the dog of Ezra (Abel Ferrara), a man he accidentally injures; or trying to avoid the ire of the boss at the shoe store where he works. Just when you think he might slow down, he’s off to the races on another plan or adventure.

    Directed by Josh Safdie and written by Safdie and frequent co-writer Ronald Bronstein, the film is an almost continuous blast of pure energy for 2 ½ hours. So many different things happen over the course of the film that the story defies conventional narratives, and yet the throughline of Marty keeps everything tightly connected. His particular type of brash behavior turns much of the film into a comedy as he does and says things that are both shocking and thrilling.

    Another thing that makes the movie sing is the fantastic characterization by Safdie and Bronstein. Almost every person who is given a speaking line in the film has a moment where they pop, which speaks to airtight dialogue that the writers have created. Characters will be introduced and then disappear for long stretches of time, and yet because they make such an impression the first time they’re on screen, it’s easy to pick up their thread right away.

    Safdie, as he’s done previously with brother Bennie (Uncut Gems), calls on a host of well-known non-actors or people with interesting faces/vibes to inhabit supporting roles, and to a person they are crucial to the film’s success. O’Leary (of Shark Tank fame), rapper Tyler the Creator, director Ferrara, magician Penn Jillette, and fashion designer Isaac Mizrahi each deliver knockout performances. The relative unknowns who play smaller roles are just as impressive, making each beat of the film feel naturalistic.

    Leading the way is the powerhouse performance by Chalamet. For one person to believably play both the famously reserved Dylan and also a firecracker like Marty is astonishing, and this role cements Chalamet’s status as his generation’s movie star. A’zion is a rising star who gets great moments as Marty’s on-again/off-again love interest. Paltrow pops in and out of the film, lighting up the screen every time she appears. Fran Drescher as Marty’s mom and Sandra Bernhard as a neighbor also pay dividends in small roles.

    Josh Safdie’s first solo directorial effort is unlike any other movie this year, or maybe even this century. Thanks to its breakneck storytelling, a magnificent performance by Chalamet, and countless intangibles that Safdie employs expertly, the film smacks viewers in the face repeatedly and demands that they come back for more.

    ---

    Marty Supreme opens in theaters on December 25.

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