Hopefully it's nothing more serious than a seasonal flu. Funny, because I've been thinking about Boulez a bit lately, and I've even been trying to learn (listen, not play) some of his works. I've also been reading some of the back-and-forth debating over the merits of Boulez as both a composer and a conductor. There's no denying that he's greatly a product of the late '40s and '50s. And, there seems to be no denying that he's had a hold on serious art music in France since that time. But I also feel that for all the complaining about how stiff and indifferent he looks as a conductor, there's an underlying generosity of spirit that seems to come through it all. I also find that he makes modern, 'bleep-blop' music sound more logical and inevitable than just about anybody else out there. He knows how to organize sound, whether tonal or atonal. I like the man.
While Boulez's approach to Mahler certainly isn't the only way to go, I like that he treats Mahler as a modern composer who just happened to be a tonal one as well. There's sort of a 'big picture' goal that he always keeps in mind.
I only have one complaint of Boulez as a musical intellect, and that's that he won't, or can't, extend that generosity of spirit to Shostakovich. Then again, there are plenty of Brucknerian 'spiritualists' who can't or won't embrace Mahler into their musical, intellectual or spiritual spheres either (just as there are more than a few Mahlerians who look down on Bruckner).
More thoughts on Boulez and Mahler. Boulez has described Mahler's music as both "epic and narrative" in quality. I like it that Boulez doesn't overlay his own narrative upon Mahler's narrative (Tilson-Thomas!). He tries to stay neutral - maybe too much so. But that also allows what Mahler wrote to speak for itself (which it can and does do). If we're going to approach Mahler by focusing or over-focusing upon conductors, I rather like Gary Bertini, who, IMHO, combines the clarity and precision of Boulez with the more innate, 'let's live for the moment' approach of a Bernstein. It seems to me that several young up-and-coming Mahlerians, such as Markus Stenz or Jonathan Nott, are trying to follow that type of path. I guess that's just inevitable.
Everyone - including that imbecile Norman Lebrecht - keeps predicting nothing but 'doom and gloom' for symphony orchestras, as well as the total end of the Mahler boom. But guess what? - that ain't happening. If dour, old Leipzig can turn into a Mahler town, any place can.