ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

MUSIC

AI Company Says It Created 100 Million New Songs

An artificial intelligence company in Delaware boasted, in a press release, that it had created 100 million new songs. That’s roughly equivalent to the entire catalog of music available on Spotify. - The Honest Broker

San Diego Symphony Delays Reopening Of Its Concert Hall

The reasons for the delay are being attributed to unexpected construction and redesign challenges that have emerged as the nearly 100-year-old hall undergoes a $125 million renovation. - San Diego Union-Tribune

Pianist Andre Watts, 77

Watts made his national concert debut when he was 16 years old with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic. Shortly after, he was asked to substitute in place of Glenn Gould with the Philharmonic. That performance is credited with launching Watts’ career. - WFYI

The Fledgling Festival That’s Helping Revive Boston’s Jazz Scene

"The Charles River Jazz Festival started (in 2021) as a slapdash (post-pandemic) passion project with a $2,000 budget, four local acts and 500 attendees. … Now the all-day festival touts major sponsors, local vendors, food trucks, a lineup of Grammy- and Emmy-nominated artists and a board of directors." - WBUR (Boston)

Record Music Streams In First Half Of This Year

The global music industry surpassed 1 trillion streams at the fastest pace, ever, in a calendar year, Luminate's 2023 Midyear Report has found. The number was reached in three months, a full month faster than 2022. - Yahoo!

Misbehavior: Is Classical Music Teaching Broken?

While classical music has long been mired in cases of sexual abuse, the psychological and emotional abuse experienced by many young musicians is harder to pin down and often goes under the radar. - Evening Standard

Chicago Versus Pittsburgh: Jeremy Reynolds Compares Orchestras

If anything, Chicago’s precision and balance may give it an edge. However, there’s a raw enthusiasm and vim to Pittsburgh’s performances that I rarely hear at other institutions. - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Considering All The Conflicted Feelings About The Surprise Success Of “Fast Car”

Now that Tracy Chapman's 1988 classic is becoming one of the biggest hits of Luke Combs's career, there are uneasy, complex emotional responses, especially for Black musicians, "knowing Chapman wouldn't be celebrated in the industry without that kind of middleman being a White man." - MSN (The Washington Post)

The Reigning Guru Of Pop Music

Some claim that he has “revolutionized pop,” while others argue that he has, as the clickbait-y title of one video essay puts it, “RUINED pop.” Either way, the critical consensus is that over the past eight years, Jack Antonoff has reshaped pop music, or a significant portion of it, in his own image. - The Drift

Study: We Hear Silence As A “Sound”

In a paper published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers used a series of sonic illusions to show that people perceive silences much as they hear sounds. - The New York Times

The State Of The San Francisco Symphony: Uncertain And Odd

"The orchestra is still receiving local support, along with national and international acclaim, but not all is well. More musicians (have been) leaving than arriving, and there is an unprecedented seven-month-long collective bargaining deadlock over a new contract." - San Francisco Classical Voice

Philly’s Pops Musicians Have To Do Something. So, Meet The No Name Pops.

With the Philly Pops in collapse — evicted by the Kimmel Center for nonpayment of rent, suing the Kimmel Center, being sued by its musicians — many of its players have formed the No Name Pops, which has already performed small-ensemble gigs and has two full-orchestra programs scheduled. - MSN (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

The Lullaby Project: Musicians Help Mothers Create Custom-Made Songs For Their Children

"Songs have been written in over 20 languages across the U.S. and around the world. … The musical styles range from classic lullaby to rock, Latin, spoken word, and everything in between. Mothers have written their lullabies from homeless shelters, prisons, hospitals, as well as their homes." - MSN (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

Antonio Stradivari’s Home And Workshop Have Reopened

"Budding luthiers and young musicians can now get a step closer to the master by honing their skills in his original house and workshop, which have been transformed into a centre of learning and a musical pilgrimage site in (Cremona,) northern Italy." - Yahoo! (AFP)

How Tracy Chapman Made Country Music History

"More than three decades after Chapman’s 'Fast Car' dropped, ... drove to the top of Billboard’s Country Airplay chart" as a Luke Combs cover, making Chapman the first Black woman with a sole songwriting credit on a number one country hit. - Los Angeles Times

Our Free Newsletter

Join our 30,000 subscribers

Latest

Don't Miss

function my_excerpt_length($length){ return 200; } add_filter('excerpt_length', 'my_excerpt_length');