Black Plastic Bag: Washington City Paper's Music Blog

Weekend Picks: Mission of Burma, NSO

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Saturday:

There are usually two kinds of band reunions: the kind in which a band plays the hits from its heyday, and the kind in which a band attempts to pick up where it left off, writing new material. Seminal Bostonian post-punk act Mission of Burma is doing a bit of both. Formed in 1979, the band released only one full length, Vs., before calling it quits as a result of guitarist Roger Miller’s tinnitus. In 2002, the band reunited and has since toured regularly and recorded more full-length albums than in its original incarnation. On Burma’s current tour, titled “Definitive Editions,” the band members are breaking from their usual blend of old and new to please their more nostalgia-hungry fans. They’ll play Vs. in its entirety throughout the tour, showing that, while they’re not living in the past, they’re not afraid to look back. Mission of Burma performs with Versus at 9 p.m. at the Black Cat, 1811 14th St. NW. $15. (202) 667-7960. —Matthew A. Stern

Sunday:

Washington, D.C., won’t have Leonard Slatkin to kick around anymore. The National Symphony Orchestra’s longtime music director is off to Detroit after the Kennedy Center decided against renewing his contract, but not before a proper send-off. D.C.’s dwindling and increasingly geriatric classical music community was at best ambivalent about the 63-year-old conductor: His 12-year tenure was marked by grousing from the Muppet Show balcony critics, who bemoaned both the declining interest in classical and the NSO’s earnest but sometimes embarrassing efforts to reverse this (see “Video Games Live!”—classical renditions of songs from Halo and World of Warcraft). Nevertheless, Slatkin left his mark. He revived interest in Russian, British, and American composers in a field dominated by Austrians and Germans, and he knew how to connect with an audience, if not with Statler and Waldorf. In this program, Slatkin will highlight some of the best of his repertoire—Shostakovich, Elgar, and Bernstein—and will be joined by master cellist Yo-Yo Ma. The performance begins at 7 p.m. at the Kennedy Center’s Concert Hall, 2700 F St. NW. $25–$150. (202) 467-4600. —Michael Paarlberg

One Response to “Weekend Picks: Mission of Burma, NSO”

  1. J. Vaughan Says:

    I was out of the area for much of Mr. Slatkin’s tenure, but had the privilege and pleasure of meeting him several times during past visits with the St. louis Symphony or when he guest-conducted the NSO. This musical Anglophile (notably Elgar and Vaughan Williams) is grateful that he decided to bring some of that repertoire here, and hope he conducted a work I feel he conducts particularly well, Elgar’s _Second_ _Symphony_. I do know he conducted the Payne elaborations of the _Third_ _Symphony_ with some authorized amendments of his own.

    Being now on limited income, and since he rarely, if ever, meets with individual audience members anymore, I am not sure if I will attend tomorrow, further given plans here at home, but, as is said, that is not set in stone if there are reasonably-priced tickets still available.

    I wish him well in his new assignment with the Detroit Symphony!

    Hoping that this finds you and your readers well,

    J. V.

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