Project Title: Phineas McBoof Crashes the Symphony
Creator: Cory Cullinan AKA Doctor Noize
Description: For the past several years, Cullinan's been amusing kids with his Doctor Noize and Grammaropolis projects
while subtly teaching them something. And while Cullinan's passion for
classical music hasn't been hidden amongst the songs he's written and
recorded, in his latest project, a Kickstarter campaign to raise $50,000 to record an album of his introduce-kids-to-orchestral-form live event, it takes center stage.
I
chatted briefly with Cullinan via e-mail last about the project, though
anyone who's chatter with him about a subject he's passionate about
knows that it's easy for him to move beyond briefly.
You joke in the mini-opera that your kids don't listen to orchestral
music, but what was the real inspiration for the project? (Or maybe it
was, in fact, your daughters.)
You
are correct -- my kids have always listened to orchestral music and opera with
me. But they are the exception to the norm, so I gave them those lines to
say in the video.
The
inspiration for the project is kids and the wonder of orchestral music.
One of my degrees from Stanford is in classical music, but I have been a
teacher, coach, and children's musician my whole life. I know what many
adults forget: Kids are the smartest, most adventurous, and most creative
audience in the world. They are made for colorful,
challenging music. The question isn't why am I creating orchestral music
for kids. The question is: Why isn't everyone doing that?
We
have dumbed down our own commercial arts culture to the point where the most
revered musical art form is the 3-minute pop song with a catchy hook. I
love rock and pop music, and I love to write and record it. But I have
also studied enough great music to know that any great composer could write a
great pop song on a lazy afternoon. We are being lazy with what we
present our children with, and it couldn't come at a worse time: The next
generation is going to have to be more sophisticated than our
generation is. Issues like climate change will not be solved by minds who
have been fed nothing but simple instant-gratification pop song hooks and their
intellectual internet-world equivalents.
We
should be giving kids the kind of music that both their brains and the world
they're inheriting from us demand. We should go big and give them our
best stuff. We should inspire them to love a challenge and master big
things. They're gonna have to.
What is the difference between, say, Prokofiev's "Peter and the Wolf" and
Britten's "Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra" and your piece?
First
of all: I love both of those pieces. There is no replacing what
they've meant to the culture and many generations. I taught both of those
pieces to my students when I was a teacher. I am doing this because I
love pieces like Britten's and Prokofiev's, not because I think they
failed.
That
being said... The Young Person's Guide, as its very title
suggests, is dated and stodgy to modern ears. Peter & The Wolf still
resonates with young ears today because it features a compelling story and is character-based,
like Phineas McBoof Crashes The Symphony. But listen to the story
and you will notice that it describes a world and sensibilities that are now
over a century old. Most kids today don't relate to hunts and wolves
outside their back yard.
Phineas
McBoof Crashes The Symphony is similar to Peter & The Wolf in that it
uses story and characters to draw children -- and adults -- in. In tone,
it is both deeper educationally and more modern in its wild and crazy humor
than Prokofiev's piece.
As
to the educational element, it goes beyond Peter & Young Person's education
on instruments and orchestration -- which it has -- to introduce some pretty
deep stuff within the story. This includes Classical Sonata Form
structure, Modern Pop Song Structure, and how the former inspired the latter.
(This is something most modern rock stars who write hit songs in Modern
Pop Song Structure don't even know -- but your kids will!) It teaches
about the five major periods of classical music. And it even tells a very
complex story about a complex character -- Phineas -- and how the choices he's
made that seem so modern, heroic and bold have actually created problems and
disappointments for the people he loves. He learns to be a better person
and relate to more complex social needs than simply the need to please his own muse.
The
other difference is that, unlike Peter and Young Person's Guide, Phineas
McBoof Crashes The Symphony is actually a full-length opera for kids and
their parents. It's the length of a movie, in two acts -- and we hope to
make it into an animated film someday. It's a complete work of musical
theater, or opera for kids. But it's not written by a guy who's spent his
life in the concert hall for adults -- it's written by a guy who has spent the
last 15 years making music for kids and -- before that -- running a high school
arts department and music program. I love classical music, but I also
know what resonates with kids from years of experience.
My
background reflects an unusual combination of experience that lead me to
believe I had to write this opera for kids. If I'm truly gonna live by my
stated belief system, reach for the moon, and bring kids and families the most
unique and rewarding thing I can give them, this is it. They don't need
another pop album from me right now -- there are plenty of others who can do
that well too. This is what I need to do now to live my life the way
Phineas McBoof would live it.
The
fact that we've successfully tested a one-hour live version of the show to
sell-out orchestral audiences in multiple states, and it's been a hit
everywhere it's played, makes it much less of a risk to record too.
So Isabel Leonard and Nathan Gunn are Kind Of A Big Deal in opera circles
-- how did they get involved?
I
have been friends with Nathan Gunn for a long time -- in fact, he's been on
every Doctor Noize album, from the very first one. Nathan married the
daughter of my hometown childhood piano teacher. His wife is an
exceptional pianist, and the whole family is made of great musicians. His
mother-in-law (my former piano teacher) and I conducted joint orchestral/choral
concerts together when we ran the music departments at neighboring high schools
in Silicon Valley. So our family connection is pretty deep.
Nathan
is brilliant and hilarious, and he gets exactly what we're doing:
He has to be musically brilliant and downright hysterical to
kids. Working with him in the studio is always a hilarious and fun day.
It doesn't hurt our PR that he was one of People Magazine's Sexiest
Men Alive. And he is so revered in the industry that he has opened a
lot of doors for us with this production. For example...