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Kronos Quartet with Rinde Eckert and Vân-Ánh Vanessa Võ at Bing Concert Hall, October 10, 2015

Stanford University Live presents Kronos Quartet, with Rinde Eckert and Vân-Ánh Vanessa Võ, performing the world premiere of Jonathan Berger's My Lai
2015-10-10
Bing Concert Hall
Stanford University, 327 Lasuen St, Stanford, CA
7:30 PM, Saturday, October 10, 2015

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Photo by Joel Simon

One Set

[6:30 PM pre-show talk with Trent Angers – unfortunately, we missed it]
[7:31 PM lights down, announcements by ? Acting Executive Director ?]

Jonathan Berger: My Lai Lullaby

  1. [7:34 PM] [Jonathan Berger](http://jonathanberger.net/): My Lai Lullaby for string quartet, đàn bâu, and đàn tranh (2015)
    [work ends 7:44 PM]

Jonathan Berger: My Lai

Jonathan Berger: My Lai: A monodrama for tenor, string quartet and Vietnamese instruments (2015)

Part I: First Landing

  1. [7:44 PM] Flight
  2. [7:51 PM] Descent
  3. [8:01 PM] the Ditch
     
  4. [8:11 PM] Game Show Interlude I
     
    Part II: Second Landing
  5. [8:14 PM] Hovering
  6. [8:19 PM] the Bunker
     
  7. [8:29 PM] Game Show Interlude II
     
    Part III: Third Landing
  8. [8:32 PM] Postcard
  9. [8:40 PM] Fishing
    [show ends 8:46 PM]

[8:53 PM post-show talk with Trent Angers, Jonathan Berger, Harriet Scott Chessman, Rinde Eckert, David Harrington, Vân-Ánh Vanessa Võ; talk ends 9:24 PM]

Performers

Kronos Quartet

Kronos Quartet

with Friends

Production Credits

Notes

Given the subject matter of the work, I was expecting something somewhat more dark and harrowing than what was performed. Not that I'm complaining, mind you. To me, My Lai represents an impossibly shameful episode in history that has yet to be fully acknowledged by the American public – No doubt there were more than a few folks in the audience who had no idea what they were in for. Sometimes that's a good thing!

Rinde Eckert did a fine job with the libretto – and in expressing the anguish and confusion of Hugh Thompson in confronting both the massacre and the ramifications of his actions later in his life. Overall, I found tonight's performance to be a bit too vague – as if the event was so horrible that it could only be confronted through shards of story. No pictures (thankfully!). No overwhelming soundtrack behind the musicians (though there was judicious use of foley sound). And plenty of sad, anguished music. Successful, but perhaps as not as powerful as it could be. I wish I could see the next iteration – a more fully staged presentation scheduled for Jan 29 in Chicago. Hopefully that one will end up on YouTube!

Rebecca Wishnia posted a nice review of the event on SFCV.

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