The real problem with Tuesday's piece lay in the conception: in trying to have four soloists play under winter conditions.
But that probably wasn't on Obama's mind when he extended his invitation to [Yo-Yo] Ma and [Itzak] Perlman (violinist in the picture).
"He said, 'I am fond of Copland,' " Ma says. "I thought to myself, Copland didn't write anything for violin and cello. And we needed help on this." The two instrumentalists turned to the composer John Williams, who worked the familiar tune "Simple Gifts," known from its use in Copland's "Appalachian Spring," into the four-minute quartet.
And the other logistics -- finding space on the crowded dais for the performers, working out wheelchair access for Perlman, whose legs were crippled with polio in childhood, and dealing with the temperature -- took "hundreds of hours," Ma says.
But when you're dealing with the president-elect of the United States, you don't want to bog him down with details.
"I don't think talking [to him] about production values would have been helpful," Ma says, laughing. "He gave us the concept. We tried to work with it."
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Sunday, January 25, 2009
Inaugural quartet worked to accommodate Perlman's disability; performance was pre-taped because of cold
From part of an essay in The Washington Post: