Happy holidays, everyone. I'm shutting down the blog -- well, shutting down my blogging -- till January 4. I'm off to visit family, and take a much-needed break. Comments might not be posted during that time (remember that, as protection against spam, they have to be approved before they go online). Though here I want to give a shout of Christmas and year-round thanks to Douglas Lautstsen, who's been helping me tremendously by going online to approve the comments for me. So, again, best wishes for the holiday season. I hope all my readers … [Read more...]
How do they listen?
A thought, bouncing off the discussion of my "Orchestra Scoreboards" post -- in the comments to the original, and then in my followup, and in comments to that. When I or others suggest changes in the classical concert format, some people worry that these will hurt the way people listen. If, for instance, we have a screen showing what's going on at any moment in the piece we're hearing, this will disturb people trying to listen seriously, or actually hurt their ability to listen. In my followup post, I suggested that all of this is … [Read more...]
How could I forget?
When I suggested some Christmas gift CDs, I somehow forgot Maya Beiser's Provenance, which I'd raved about so strongly earlier. It's a rich solo cello exploration -- with added multitracking, electronics, and drums -- of the middle eastern music Maya heard when she was young, and growing up in Israel. Plus (middle eastern-esque) Led Zep's "Kashmir," which she heard, just as we all did. Her romp through that crowns the album.And I might also give a shout to Carlo Bergonzi's Christmas album. Such a wonderfully pure tenor, though also formidably … [Read more...]
Gifts
Three recordings that enriched my life this past year, as if they were gifts. And, therefore, gifts I'd happily buy for any musical person on my list. Stewart Goodyear, late Beethoven piano sonatas, on the Marquis labelStewart's a friend, so if you want to say I'm praising this too much, go right ahead. But I think you'd be wrong. Stewart told me a while ago that he wanted to play all the Beethoven sonatas -- in a single day's marathon. Last summer he played them in Ottawa (he's Canadian), but over a few days.At the Ottawa cycle, … [Read more...]
Another portent
This is the second news item I promised yesterday. Might have commented on it a while ago, but...life happened. The Cleveland Orchestra wants a younger audience. Though the headline in the Cleveland Plain Dealer story about that was pretty mild. "Free tickets for children one of many new initiatives planned by Cleveland Orchestra." And yes, anyone under 18 will in the future get free admission to the lawn, for the orchestra's summer concerts at the Blossom Music Center. And, at some point, they'll also get free tickets to at … [Read more...]
Portent
Here's a news item with -- as I'll hardly have to stress -- great importance for the future of classical music. Work for New York freelance classical musicians is drying up. This was a major story in the New York Times, early this month. And, believe me, it was dire. I remember the New York freelance classical music scene in past decades, and knew many musicians who made a living from it. Not always the easiest living, but you could get by, and maybe even do well. And now, to quote the Times story:[N]ight after night highly trained … [Read more...]
Essential reading
Some of the best -- most thorough, most well-documented, most perceptive -- writing I've seen on the future of classical music is in a three-part series from Kyle MacMillan, the fine arts critic of the Denver Post. Full disclosure -- Kyle and I agree on many things, and he interviewed me for the series. I'm quoted in the first part, which came out a week ago Sunday. The second part appeared yesterday, with the third one scheduled for next Sunday. But leave my involvement out of it. Kyle's writing speaks for itself. If you want one … [Read more...]
Cage Against the Machine
"Support is building like a tidal wave," says the Daily Telegraph in Britain, about a wonderful, unlikely, but conceivably successful project -- to push a recording of John Cage's 4'33" (his famous silent piece) to the top of the British pop chart. This is a protest action, a way of resisting what many in the UK feel is manipulation of the pop charts by Simon Cowell. Read all about it here, in a BBC News story. Last year, to keep Cowell from getting his hand-picked song to No. 1, a group of pop music people started a movement -- which … [Read more...]
A cautionary tale
In one spasm of my recurrent Anglophilia, I read most of a long, two-volume history of Britain in the '60s, by Dominic Sandbrook. In the first volume, Never Had it So Good (which runs from the Suez crisis in 1956 to the rise of the Beatles) there's an episode that's worth recounting here. It's about the growth of British suburbs. In the '50s, suburbs became a phenomenon in Britain, just as they did in the US. They'd grown tremendously, and seemed not just to be a new place to live, but to create a new way … [Read more...]
Scoreboards — yes or no?
My "Orchestra scoreboards" post -- or rather my reprinting of Michael Oneil Lam's blog post -- evoked a lot of comments. Some very supportive. Some people loved the idea of putting data/info about a piece being played on a screen in the concert hall. And some people didn't. More on them in a moment. But it was good that one commenters noted that similar things have already been done:The Houston Symphony and Pacific Symphony (and maybe others?) have offered something I think is akin to the scoreboard concept....both orchestras have held … [Read more...]










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