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Thursday, January 1, 2026

John Adams - Scheherazade.2 (Leila Josefowicz; David Robertson)


Information

Composer: John Adams
  1. Scheherazade.2: I. Tale of the Wise Young Woman - Pursuit by the True Believers
  2. Scheherazade.2: II. A Long Desire (love scene)
  3. Scheherazade.2: III. Scheherazade and the Men with Beards
  4. Scheherazade.2: IV. Escape, Flight, Sanctuary

Leila Josefowicz, violin
St. Louis Symphony Orchestra
David Robertson, conductor

Date: 2016
Label: Nonesuch

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Review

This remarkable four-movement, 48-minute work for solo violin, orchestra, and cimbalom (a hammered dulcimer) packs quite a wallop. Composer John Adams explains that he was inspired to challenge the legend of Scheherazade (and Rimsky-Korsakov’s) after seeing an exhibit at The Museum of the Arab World and realizing how women were–and are–abused in the Middle East.

Here Scheherazade, personified by the violin, is in combat with her oppressors (the orchestra), and she is one strong character–intrepid, empowered, and still, at least in the second movement, alluring. The orchestra is mostly rambunctious and squally while the solo violin tends to play lyrically above it. The recording occasionally allows the former to drown out the latter, but the orchestra has its lyric moments as well and the power struggle is clear.

The work’s four movements are like tone poems with non-specific, non-linear programmes. Their titles tell the stories: I) Tale of the Wise Young Woman/Pursuit by the True Believers; II) A Long Desire (love scene); III) Scheherazade and the Men with Beards; IV) Escape, Flight, Sanctuary. Wonderfully–and perversely–there is nary a hint of the sexy, fake Orientalism that has been the byword of “musical tales of the middle-east” throughout musical history. There’s more clear-and-present menace than veils.

The first movement begins in a jumpy, anxious fashion and the orchestration is thick, with the cimbalom adding an undertone of creepy exoticism. Leila Josefowicz’s violin laments, but is thrashed by an orchestral cacophony–the True Believers. The “Love Scene” burns with sensuality and longing, with chords like heartbeats, and its final moments are a gorgeous song on the violin with the strings offering a peaceful cushion as well.

The mood is broken in the “Men With Beards” section. These guys are angry and wrangling and the orchestral writing is at its most angular and aggressive; Josefowicz has a bit of trouble being heard in the mix, and I sensed that this might be what Adams wanted. In the last movement Scheherazade escapes–from the mad brass, with wild woodwinds in pursuit–but is surrounded in the middle by those nasty strings again. Any peace and freedom may be temporary.

What an odd work! It isn’t particularly beautiful, and the storytelling may be sketchy (Adams isn’t attempting a Symphonie fantastique), but it’s a riveting, somewhat cinematic work that should be heard. And I can’t imagine a finer performance from either soloist or orchestra, all under the fine watch and leadership of conductor David Robertson. Frankly, the world needed a new, revised version of this flawed paradise, and this may just be it.

— Robert Levine

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John Adams (born 15 February 1947) is an American composer and conductor. Educated at Harvard, he initially embraced modernism before developing a distinctive style that blends minimalism with expressive, eclectic influences. Based in San Francisco, Adams gained recognition through orchestral works such as HarmoniumHarmonielehre and Short Ride in a Fast Machine. He is also a major operatic composer, with works including Nixon in ChinaThe Death of Klinghoffer and Doctor Atomic, often addressing historical and political themes. His music has earned many honors, including Grammy and Pulitzer Prizes.

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Leila Josefowicz (born 20 October 1977) is an American-Canadian classical violinist. Born in Ontario, Canada and raised in California, the U.S.A., she began violin studies at an early age and later trained at the Curtis Institute of Music. Josefowicz is a leading interpreter of new repertoire and has premiered numerous concertos written for her by composers including John Adams, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Luca Francesconi and Colin Matthews. She performs regularly with major orchestras worldwide, records for leading labels, and has received multiple honors, including a MacArthur Fellowship and the 2018 Avery Fisher Prize.

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David Robertson (born 19 July 1958) is an American conductor. Educated at London's Royal Academy of Music, he studied horn and composition before focusing on conducting. Robertson has appeared with major orchestras and festivals worldwide and is noted for his advocacy of new music and innovative programming. He served as Music Director of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra from 2005 to 2018 and as Chief Conductor of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra through 2019, earning multiple Grammy Awards. He has also maintained a prominent career at leading opera houses and is deeply committed to music education.

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