Rick Brookhiser reminded me last night to strike the Jane Chord of Duke: A Life of Duke Ellington:

The Jane Chord, to which Bill Buckley introduced us years ago, is a concept originally promulgated by Hugh Kenner. The idea is that if you make a two-word sentence out of the first and last words of a book, it will tell you something revealing about the book in question. Or not: the Jane Chord of Pride and Prejudice is It/them. But every once in a while you run across a Jane Chord so resonant that it makes the room shiver–the chord for Death Comes for the Archbishop is One/built–and even when a famous book yields up nonsense, it’s still a good game to play….
I rejoice to report that the Jane Chord of Duke is, believe it or not, He/true. Success is inevitable!

In time that started to happen, and now it’s come to pass. Not only am I The Wall Street Journal‘s drama critic, but I also write a biweekly cultural column for the Journal in which I range as far afield as I like, and my title at Commentary was changed four years ago from “music critic” to “critic-at-large.” Between 2002 and 2009 I published biographies of
But I didn’t. For some reason that I don’t fully understand, I decided around the time that I graduated from college that I didn’t want to specialize in anything, thus ensuring that I wouldn’t become an academic, much less a professional musician. Instead I write about all of the arts, and of late I’ve branched out to become a playwright and opera librettist as well. It’s always been my goal to emulate the composer-critic-conductor