NEW YORK, NY.- Anthony Parnther has a job that routinely takes him to fantastic places. Parnther, 42, makes his New York Philharmonic conducting debut this week. His destination? Wakanda. With a wave of his hand, hell evoke lush jungles and shimmering citadels as the film Black Panther screens overhead.
Back home in Los Angeles in January, Parnther will pass through idealistic college classrooms and anxious laboratories, headed to a date with destiny in Los Alamos, New Mexico, when he conducts the sweeping score to Oppenheimer.
But in a recent video interview, Parnther was finding his way to someplace quite different: Whoville.
Ill be very honest with you, he said in a video interview. Im sitting here trying to rapidly memorize the words to Youre a Mean One, Mr. Grinch.
He was cramming for a Christmas concert with the San Bernardino Symphony Orchestra, where he has served as music director since 2019.
I could tell you that Im sitting here studying the Prokofiev Second Piano Concerto, which were doing on this concert, he said. But Im actually more worried about the Grinch, because Im the soloist.
Posts at San Bernardino and the Southeast Symphony Orchestra a Los Angeles ensemble that is one of the nations oldest primarily Black orchestras allow Parnther to explore and expand the repertoire. An enthusiastic communicator, he talks his audiences through his programs regularly, so singing isnt that big of a stretch.
But his Black Panther and Oppenheimer engagements shed light on a less visible aspect of his growing career, which has included appearances with major ensembles, including the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. Even if you dont know Parnther by name, youve likely heard his conducting on film soundtracks such as Avatar: The Way of Water and Turning Red; television series like Fargo and Only Murders in the Building; or video games, including League of Legends and Guild Wars. If youve streamed Encanto at the Hollywood Bowl, a concert performance of the animated Disney film featuring the original voice cast, youve seen him in action.
Ludwig Göransson, who composed the scores for Black Panther and Oppenheimer, views Parnther as an invaluable collaborator. In a video interview from Los Angeles, he said: If something doesnt sound right, Ill hit him up on the podium and well talk about things how to adjust a couple of notes or change a voicing and he can immediately relate that information to the musicians.
One reason he works so effectively with studio musicians, Göransson says, is because he emerged from their ranks. For Parnther, working with Göransson on the Star Wars TV spinoffs The Mandalorian and The Book of Boba Fett was especially meaningful. As an eighth grader in Norfolk, Virginia, he learned his middle-school band would play music from Star Wars on a coveted trip to the theme park Kings Dominion. Thumbing through a musical reference book, he flipped past A and the accordion it brought up unfortunate associations with The Lawrence Welk Show before landing on B and the bassoon. He took up the instrument as his way to tag along.
Parnther, the son of Jamaican and Samoan academics, was exposed to gospel in the Baptist church, but it was soundtracks by John Williams that sparked his interest in music. The timing wasnt ideal: In high school, when he decided to pursue music professionally, his family was living in public housing after losing their home in a fire; his mother was fighting cancer.
She bought her son the best bassoon she could afford, a Schreiber S91 Prestige: not state of the art, but a durable instrument.
She had to literally make the choice between paying the electric bill and making the payments on my instrument, Parnther said. She decided to make the payments on my instrument, so there was a fire lit in me. I wanted to repay my mother for the sacrifices that she made.
Parnther went on to earn music degrees from Northwestern University and Yale University. He then took a position at East Tennessee State University in Johnson City, Tennessee, gaining confidence as a conductor while earning a music education degree.
His tenacity and ambition paid off. The kid who had been inspired by Star Wars to pick up the bassoon would go on to play his hardy Schreiber for Williams in the soundtracks for the last three feature films in the series. He also played bassoon on sessions with high-profile pop artists, including Beyoncé, Rihanna and Snoop Dogg. (When his instrument was stolen from his car in 2020, its theft and recovery made headlines.)
His work as a versatile, open-minded conductor brought him attention beyond the studios. In addition to his San Bernardino and Southeast Symphony posts, in 2020 Parnther was named conductor of the Gateways Music Festival Orchestra, an elite annual aggregation of classical musicians of African descent, whose Chicago debut he will lead in April.
Conducting also brought unanticipated collaborations with singer John Legend, hip-hop producer Metro Boomin and metal band Avenged Sevenfold, among others. Parnther hasnt lured those artists into his concert-music realm yet, but its not out of the question.
The conductor of the future, in order for the orchestra to remain relevant, will have to find a way to center the orchestra and not the genre, he said. Sometimes that means you mix genres on the same concert, if theres a story line or a relevant through line.
And the skills hes picked up in the fast-paced world of commercial entertainment have proved transferable. Engaged last year to record The Central Park Five, Anthony Davis Pulitzer Prize-winning opera, with the Long Beach Opera in just two days, Parnther took the company into a Glendale, California, film studio. He used a metronomic click track and other tools of the trade to maximize efficiency.
The click track lends a certain precision, Davis said in a video interview, but there are times when I want a little more flexibility to let the music breathe crucial in sections involving improvisation. It was a great experience, having the tightness of the music, yet also allowing space for the creative expression of individual musicians.
Parnther has used his platforms and rising profile to champion Black composers such as Davis and Adolphus Hailstork, while nurturing artists who straddle worlds as he does, including Kris Bowers, Chanda Dancy and Tamar-kali. But his Hollywood affiliations have their own perks.
Im not a famous conductor, Parnther said, but I have been picked out in so many public spaces as the conductor from Encanto at the Hollywood Bowl. Hes seen a video of his symphonic concert with Metro Boomin rack up more than 6 million views on YouTube. And a comment that I ran across is like, Oh my God, this is awesome but wait a minute, is that the same conductor from Encanto at the Hollywood Bowl?
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.