Why Great Middlebrow Television No Longer Gets The Respect It’s Due

“Even when midbrow television is critically acclaimed and beloved by those who watch it, it still doesn’t get much in the way of award recognition or break into the larger cultural conversation. Midbrow is considered good for right now, not for posterity.”
New York Magazine Published: 04.28.16
London Has Lost A Third Of Its Music Venues In Ten Years. What Can Be Done?

“We found it fairly easy to answer the question of why so many venues are closing; the problem is similar to that plaguing other cultural and community-led spaces across the capital. Artists are being turned into cultural commuters, unable to sustain themselves in the capital because of a lack of spaces – adequate housing, studios and rehearsal spaces – and, now, stepping-stone venues.”
London Essays Published: 04.27.16
Adrian Ellis: A Recipe For Vibrant Cultures In The Big City?

“Traditional audiences accessing traditional forms of culture in traditional ways are under threat throughout Europe and North America. Increasingly, people are enthused by experiencing the arts in new spaces and contexts, particularly ones where they can socialise, hang out and come and go according to their own timetable.”
London Essays Published: 04.27.16
Study: Music Training Helps Babies Learn Language

“Music training not only improved the babies’ ability to notice when a musical rhythm skipped a beat, it also improved their ability to notice when the rhythms of speech changed unexpectedly, an important skill for learning to talk.”
Seattle Times Published: 04.29.16
Poet, Genius, Depressive, Insurance Man – Wallace Stevens

“Stevens’s seraphic art and his plodding life … merge as sides of a coin: philosophical, in his continual grappling with implications of the death of God – a loss that he tried to remedy by making poetry stand in for religion – and psychological, in his constant compulsion to cheer himself up.”
The New Yorker Published: 05.02.16
Gender Imbalance: Major Museum Shows By The Numbers

“Only 27% of the 590 major solo shows organised by nearly 70 institutions between 2007 and 2013 were devoted to women, The Art Newspaper’s annual attendance survey reveals.”
The Art Newspaper Published: 04.29.16
Wexford Festival Opera, Recovered From Great Recession, Will Return To Three-Weekend Format

“In yet another sign of a recovering economy,” the festival, renowned for reviving obscure and forgotten scores, will from 2017 “be extended from a 12-day event to an 18-day event, a return to the pre-Recessionary format.”
Wexford Echo (Ireland) Published: 04.27.16
Is There Any Point Anymore To The ‘European Capital Of Culture’ Business?

“Initially celebrating the wealth of European heritage, the title, with its attendant year-long cultural extravaganza in the host city, went to the obvious candidates, including Berlin, Amsterdam and Dublin … But, hand on heart, who can say that in the intervening years they have beaten a path to Maribor in Slovenia, Mons in Belgium or Essen in Germany? Who can name five cultural highlights in Guimarães in Portugal, Stavanger in Norway or Umeå in Sweden?”
The Irish Times Published: 04.25.16
A Fringe Circuit For Radio And Audio Drama

“A radio production company is launching the ‘audio drama equivalent of the fringe’, in a bid to widen the market beyond the BBC’s output.”
The Stage (UK) Published: 04.28.16
Robbie Fairchild Is Back From Broadway, But He’s Still Doing Wheeldon’s Dances To Gershwin’s Music

“Pop quiz: The New York City Ballet principal Robert Fairchild is dancing to the sounds of Gershwin, in choreography by Christopher Wheeldon. The title of the work contains the word ‘American.’ Where are we?”
New York Times Published: 05.01.16
2,000 Pigeons Make Art In The Brooklyn Sky

“Just past sunset on Saturday, a man standing atop an aircraft carrier along the Brooklyn waterfront waved a long bamboo pole with a black garbage bag attached to it, and hundreds of tiny lights shot up like sparks spat from a fire.”
New York Times Published: 04.29.16
There’s More To Syrian Archaeology Than Palmyra

“Some five years into its violent civil war, Syria remains a hotbed of archaeological exploration. Such exploration involves perhaps a good deal more danger than those archaeologists envisioned when they were in graduate school.”
Pacific Standard Published: 04.26.16
The Race For Mayor Of London – Who’s Best For The Arts?

Zac Goldsmith (Conservatives), Sadiq Khan (Labour), Caroline Pidgeon (Liberal Democrats), and Sian Berry (Greens) make their cases.
The Stage (UK) Published: 04.27.16
The American Colonies Had Some Very Handsome Money

“With Harriet Tubman coming to the American $20 bill, and other changes being made to the look of money in the United States, the design of dollars is once again set to evolve. But our current bills still hold many of the symbols and motifs that existed in our earliest paper money, the Colonial and Continental currencies.”
Atlas Obscura Published: 04.22.16
Britain’s National Theatre Should Go Back To Being A Repertory Company, Says Ian McKellen

“I think it’s a great shame that the National Theatre, which has enough money to do it, doesn’t have, at the centre of its work, a company that stays together for a period of time.”
The Stage (UK) Published: 04.27.16
Newfoundland Is Closing More Than Half Of Its Libraries

“The library board in Newfoundland and Labrador announced sweeping changes to its services Wednesday, adopting a regional library model which will see 54 branches close in the next two years. The board met Tuesday to discuss how best to deal with a $1-million loss in its annual budget, a cut announced in the provincial budget.”
CBC Published: 04.27.16
No Canadian Province Charged Sales Tax On Books – Until Now

“The budget outlines a new 10 per cent tax on book sales in Newfoundland and Labrador, which would be added to the current five per cent federal GST. … If implemented, Newfoundland and Labrador would become the first province in Canada to have its own tax on books.”
CBC Published: 04.18.16
How On Earth Do You Choreograph Something Fresh To Vivaldi’s ‘Four Seasons’? Edouard Lock Was Itching To Try

“These are pieces that have entered the collective unconscious. The act of combining something that you’ve already experienced with something you haven’t yet seen is something I like to use as one of the tensions available to a work. There’s a sort of distortion between the stage and the audience that is dependent on the memories of each individual.” (One thing Lock did not do is leave the music as is.)
The Globe and Mail (Canada) Published: 04.26.16
What Music Conservatories Should (and Shouldn’t Be) Doing

“The best thing conservatories can do is to graduate healthy, intact people with a sense of agency over their careers and lives. The whole Svengali thing has to be held in check, because universities have ways of burying those bad experiences and boards don’t want to hear it.”
San Francisco Classical Voice Published: 04.21.16
The Rarefied World Of Larry Gagosian

“Gagosian himself is estimated to clear $1 billion in sales annually and is among a small group of gallery owners whose appetites are omnivorous: He works across the contemporary and modern eras, representing living artists like John Currin and Mark Grotjahn while also dealing on behalf of the estates of Alberto Giacometti, Richard Avedon and Helen Frankenthaler.”
The Wall Street Journal Published: 04.26.16
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London’s National Gallery Needs More Space, Says Director

Gabriele Finaldi said the floor space of the gallery “hasn’t actually changed pretty much in a generation and we are now having 50% more visitors, and potentially that is going to grow in the future”.
BBC Published:04.27.16
Dancing With The Stars (Or At Least Their Holograms)

Madame Tussaud’s in Tokyo has opened a new attraction. “Visitors can waltz and disco with Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Lady Gaga, Beyonce and Marilyn Monroe, or pirouette in a “Swan Lake” ballet with Olympics figure skating champion Yuzuru Hanyu.”
Yahoo! (AP) Published:04.28.16
BBC Commits To 50-50 On-Screen Gender Parity Casting By 2020

The BBC said that, by 2020, 50% of on-screen and on-air roles will be filled by women, including lead roles in all genres, with a similar 15% target set for black, Asian and minority ethnic people on screen. In terms of the representation of LGBT people, the BBC has committed to an 8% target, which is also the target set for disability on screen. However, this does not include a commitment to having 8% of lead roles filled by disabled talent, with the BBC pledging “some lead roles”.
The Stage Published:04.28.16
Canadian Television? What’s That? Now The Nightmare Of Needing To Figure It Out

“Changing Canadian broadcast and content regulations is a hellish task. The public feels very differently from the industry, and the creative side of the industry, especially in TV, doesn’t really want creativity – it wants jobs. It is implausible that all sides will agree on a paradigm that benefits everybody. Even more unlikely is the sudden emergence of great Canadian television.”
The Globe and Mail (Canada) Published:04.28.16
Chicago Symphony’s Pioneering “Beyond The Score” Project Is Canceled

“The cost of all the extra elements far outweighed the revenue from ticket sales. And the ability to attract large philanthropic funds to support the project after its third or fourth or fifth year became very difficult. For the last five years, it was losing quite a bit of money.”
Chicago Reader Published:04.28.16
Why Are People Flocking To Improv Classes? Because It Makes Them Better People

Julie Brister, a teacher at Upright Citizens Brigade: “I think improv helps people become better humans. It makes people listen better. Improv rules are life rules. And so, if a lot more people are taking improv, a lot more people are being thoughtful in their daily life about how they interact with each other.”
The Atlantic Published:04.22.16
Lost Score To Missing Malcolm Arnold Symphony Discovered On EBay

It is thought that Sir Malcolm Arnold, a manic depressive, schizophrenic and alcoholic, could have given the work away in lieu of payment to a plumber or repairman, after the Court of Protection stopped him accessing his bank account.
The Telegraph (UK) Published:04.25.16
Jodie Foster’s Entire Career Has Been Motivated By Fear Of Failure

“Oh my God, yeah. If Mother Teresa is propelled to do good works because she believes in God, I am propelled to do good works because of how bad I feel about myself. It’s the first place I go. ‘Oh, what did I do wrong?'”
New York Times Published:05.01.16



