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MUSIC

Vienna Boys Choir Needed, And Got, A Government Bailout

"The Austrian government said Saturday that it is giving the country’s centuries-old Vienna Boys Choir 800,000 euros ($884,000) to help it out of severe financial difficulties. … The choir had been struggling with rising costs due to inflation and a lack of income (due to the) pandemic." - AP

We Are All Born Slaves To The Rhythm: Study

Scientist Henkjan Honing and his colleagues have found that even newborns have the ability to recognize a beat and to notice when a regular rhythm is broken. - Nautilus

How The Atlanta Symphony Started A Talent Program

The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s Talent Development Program, established in 1993 to identify and nurture talented African American and Latino music students, began with a simple question from Azira G. Hill. - ArtsATL

Why Vinyl Recordings Still Have Commercial Allure

While more than four fifths of recorded music is consumed via streaming, vinyl continues to make a comeback. Sales rose by 11.7% to 5.9 million units in 2023, increasing for the 16th year in a row, according to the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) trade group. - BBC

This Village Girl From A Distant Russian Republic Could Be The Met’s Next Superstar Mezzo

"It hasn’t been an easy journey from (Bashkortostan) to New York. Along the way, (Aigul) Akhmetshina had to overcome multiple setbacks, including failures in vocal competitions, an auto accident that left her unable to sing for months, then (being) told by a conservatory that she wasn’t good enough for a scholarship." - AP

A Stat That Shows How The US Music Market Is Changing

This year, a record 98 Spanish-language songs made Billboard’s list, and six made it into the top 10. - CNN

Mark Swed On “Maestro”

One of the reasons why “Maestro” comes across as pretty good, or maybe even a little better than that, is because it is not really about music. - Los Angeles Times

Music Director Fired By Orchestra Management For Refusing COVID Vaccine Settles Religious Discrimination Lawsuit

Conductor David Lockington, a Christian Scientist, had been music director of the Pasadena Symphony in Los Angeles County since 2013; he was forced out in 2021 after orchestra management denied his request for religious and medical exemptions from vaccination requirements because he was an independent contractor. - Pasadena Now

Alex Ross’s List Of Best Classical Recordings Of 2023

"I can’t remember a year in which so many pleasure-inducing, addiction-triggering albums crowded my desk." - The New Yorker

A Conversation With The Vienna Philharmonic’s First Woman Concertmaster

She noted that the increasing sense of equality has also heightened competition. “Even more than in the past, one’s achievement is what counts,” she said. “Because when the doors are open to everyone, the question is: Who is the best?” - The New York Times

The “Santa Claus Symphony” That Riled Classical Music Fans

At the center of the melée was William Henry Fry, a widely traveled composer and critic whose lectures on music drew sold-out crowds, and who had composed Santa Claus for the players and occasion. As for what made Fry so important that a holiday-themed piece could ignite a war of words? - WRTI

The Fight For New Music

Concert programmers and soloists who wish to stray from the beaten concerto path must often summon their powers of persuasion to get new and obscure repertoire before receptive audiences. How do they do it, and what lessons do their examples hold? - Strings

How Jewish Immigrant Irving Berlin Created A Christmas Song That All Americans Could Embrace

"This was a new kind of Christmas carol. It didn't mention the birth of Jesus, angels or wise men." Bing Crosby sang it in the 1942 film Holiday Inn, and "by December it was on every radio, in every jukebox. … The key reason was the nation’s entry into World War II." - The Conversation

How “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas” Was Transformed From Morbid Movie Dirge Into Cheerful Holiday Hit

The original lyrics written for the film Meet Me in St. Louis began "Have yourself a merry little Christmas / It may be your last / Next year we may all be living in the past." For the version we know now, we can thank first Judy Garland and then Frank Sinatra. - Mental Floss

Josh Kosman: 2023 Classical Music Highlights Dominated By New Music

“New” is the key factor here. In compiling my best-of list for the year gone by — a list that has now swollen year-over-year from 12 to 14 — I found that contemporary offerings made up the bulk of my choices. No knock on Beethoven, but it’s good to hear some fresh perspectives. - San Francisco Chronicle

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