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From Lara Downes: New sheriff in town

sarah-rothenberg

On the musical frontier, all around the country, there's a new sheriff in town. Increasingly, many performing musicians, including several of my close friends and colleagues, are taking charge and instating a new order in the dual role of performing artist and concert presenter, in communities nationwide. People like cellist Zuill Bailey, who's building a nationwide franchise of imaginative chamber music festivals, transforming towns from El Paso, TX to Sitka, AK with a vision of bedrock-deep community engagement. Like pianist George Lepauw, … [Read more...]

The Monday post

symph hall blog

From Janet Baker-Carr's Evening at Symphony: A Portrait of the Boston Symphony Orchestra: During the first [Boston] performance of Brahms's Third Symphony the audience left the hall in hundreds.…During the last movement of the first performance of Bruckner's Symphony No. 7 (1887) there were more people on the stage than in the audience.…[One critic] suggested that in case of fire Bruckner's Seventh should be played so that the hall would empty instantly. Do most of us know that new music could be greeted this way, decades before … [Read more...]

…for…

s4m 2 blog

So who is Spring for Music for? If you go to the concerts, the answer seems obvious. This festival — which finished its third season at Carnegie Hall last week — features orchestras from around the US, some of which haven't played in New York before, or haven't done so for years. Their hometown fans (sometimes more than a thousand at a time) flood Carnegie Hall, waving colored banners. So that's who the festival in practice is for, the people who most visibly come to it, the ones who most clearly care. The hometown fans. But I … [Read more...]

Spring…

detroit blog

Three posts, in reaction to Spring for Music, an orchestra festival at Carnegie Hall, now in its third and next to last year. I've been to only two of the concerts, because I no longer live in New York. But the one I went to last Friday — the Detroit Symphony, under Leonard Slatkin, playing all four Ives symphonies, which I very much enjoyed  — certainly made me think. So first my reaction to the concert's audience, to the Detroitness of the whole thing, because one feature of this festival is the excitement of the hometown audience … [Read more...]

The Monday post

skok blog

Introducing something fun — posts every Monday with classical music surprises, often from our forgotten history. Today, two orchestra tales. When Leopold Stokowski was music director of the Philadelphia Orchestra he somehow discovered that the Philadelphia police force had a motorcycle officer who was an expert xylophonist.  So he invited him to a children's concert and made him the centerpiece of a surprise charade. Stokowski himself opened the program with Mozart's Marriage of Figaro Overture. But he played it at a mile-a-minute … [Read more...]

Two paths

OAE blog

This is a post about assumptions. We all make them. And we couldn't do without them. None of us approaches anything we do as some kind of blank slate. We have opinions, preconceptions, things we like and things we don't, and all of this colors everything we do. Even research. If you want to find a new audience for classical music, and do research to find how best to do that, the direction of your research — and even your conclusions — will blow with the winds of the assumptions you made at the start. To show what I mean, here are two … [Read more...]

From Lara Downes: Walking the walk

LD Artist Sessions

When I walked onstage at Yoshi’s San Francisco last Wednesday night, it was with a completely new version of butterflies in the stomach. This time, after a lifetime of going onstage as a concert pianist, I was going on as a concert presenter, welcoming the audience as Artistic Director to the very first program on my new series The Artist Sessions. I was launching the series with the West Coast release party for my new CD Exiles' Cafe, and I'd invited the genre-bending Quartet San Francisco as my guests, along with a co-host, Rik Malone from … [Read more...]

Imagine the future

arch blog

Well, part of this isn't imaginary. I have speaking gigs coming up — late May at the Bergen International Festival in Norway, and June 19 at the League of American Orchestras annual conference in St. Louis. In Bergen, I'll be speaking privately on May 30 to Klassisk, the association of Norwegian concert promoters, and then I seem to have top billing in a debate on the future of classical music, from 5 to 6 PM on May 31. Debating with me will be Rolf Gupta, a conductor, and the manager of the classical music at NRK Radio (the Norwegian … [Read more...]

Hidden history

san carlo blog

Here's a solution to the Met Opera's financial woes: Open a gambling casino in the opera house. Cue howls of outrage. But opera was in fact funded that way in 19th century Italy. That's one thing I've learned from a book called Bel Canto Bully (not a great title), a biography of Domenico Barbaja, the leading 19th century Italian opera impresario, written by Philip Eisenbeiss, and about to be published. I knew Barbaja's name, as many serious opera fans might, because he ran the San Carlo opera house — the grandest in Italy — in … [Read more...]

Make some noise

fountain blog

Taking some leisure yesterday in the sun, at the Lincoln Center fountain. The fountain was putting on a show — dancing, playing, shooting high, falling back to nothing at all, making walls of water, so much fun. Here's a video (from my iPhone), complete with dancing little girl. (It'll take a while to load. And clicking the arrow on the right won't show it.) All this was completely unheralded. Nothing advertising the fountain dance, unless you count a guard coming around to warn people (like me) sitting at the edge that we might get … [Read more...]

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