ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

MUSIC

Who’s Running The Ship? San Francisco Makes More Major Changes In Its Leadership

For nearly a year now, SF Symphony has operated without a CEO and has been without a chief financial officer since January — not a time for making major changes — and yet last week, apparently a reorganization of the administration began, involving a good number of layoffs. San Francisco Classical Voice

The Future Of Opera: Detroit?

It’s hard to overstate the unlikelihood of a director as innovative and internationally celebrated as Sharon taking the reins of a decidedly regional (and in certain respects conservative) opera company like Detroit’s. - The New York Times

It Took War For North Americans To Learn About Ukrainian Music

There has been little known in the West about Ukrainian composers until recently, especially in Canada and the U.S., according to experts. “North Americans know nothing about Ukrainian classical music,” - San Francisco Classical Voice

Sounds Like They’ve Finally Fixed The Acoustics At The Sydney Opera House’s Concert Hall

Ever since the landmark building opened in 1973, its Concert Hall's acoustics have been notoriously bad — and resistant to improvement. Now, a 2½-year, A$150 million renovation has given the auditorium sound that is, says the Sydney Symphony's concertmaster, "better than anything we dared imagine." - The Guardian

In Response To Highland Park Shooting, Ravinia Festival Cancels This Week’s Concerts

The festival campus is just a couple of miles away from the site of the murders at Monday's Fourth of July parade. - MSN (Chicago Tribune)

The Remarkable Turnaround Of The Atlanta Symphony

The ASO has announced a new three-year collective bargaining agreement with its musicians, and its eighth consecutive year with a balanced budget. The orchestra exceeded its Annual Fund revenue goals, and the symphonic world is abuzz over the appointment of Nathalie Stutzmann as the ASO music director. - Arts ATL

The Young Conductor Who Replaced Muti On A Moment’s Notice And Wowed The Chicago Symphony

“I wasn’t expecting it, but somehow, I took more notes than usual on the Brahms that day,” she says. - Chicago Tribune

Someone Thinks Orchestra Music Died In The 20th Century

In order to begin to reclaim orchestral music of the 20th century, John Mauceri poses the following question: “If we put aside the unquestioned priority given to the avant-garde, the next wave, and the constant re-experimentation that gets so much intellectual attention, what does the remainder look like?” - LA Review of Books

“Country-House Opera” In England Is Thriving, And Not Just At Glyndebourne

Two hours south of London, Glyndebourne is the oldest and most famous of the summer opera festivals at the historic country homes of the nobility, but it's not the only one. Among the newest (its current incarnation opened in 2017) and best is Grange Park Opera. - The New York Times

After 51 Years, A Boston New Music Institution Calls It Quits

Boston is losing an essential purveyor of invigorating new music — after 51 years, 109 commissions, 20 recordings, and 243 world premieres. Until now, BMV has stood as the country’s oldest professional ensemble dedicated to contemporary music. - Boston Globe

How Lilith Fair Changed Music 25 Years Ago

For the artists and fans who experienced it, Lilith Fair felt revolutionary. It's success upended concert industry norms and created a new place where female artistry could evolve and flourish. - NPR

Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture” Has Been An Orchestra Favorite For The Fourth Of July.  But Not So Much This Year

"Some groups decided to skip it, arguing that its bellicose themes would be offensive during wartime. Others, eager to show solidarity with Ukraine, added renditions of the Ukrainian national anthem to their programs to counter the overture's exaltation of czarist Russia. Still others are reworking it." - The New York Times

Shocked And Confused: Why Is Montreal’s McGill Conservatory Of Music Suddenly Shutting Down?

Administrators said the Conservatory had gone from 550 students in pre-pandemic years to 300 last year, to a projection of less than 100 students next year. This drop in enrollment was one of several factors that made the institution “no longer financially viable nor sustainable.” - La Scena Musicale

Why Pittsburgh Festival Opera Is Not Putting On Any Operas This Year

Faced with the challenges of simply surviving as a small independent company post-pandemic, PFO — noting that there's more grant money available for educational endeavors than for basic production and performance — will focus on its Young Artist Program. - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Peter Gelb On Reinventing The Met Opera

"I’m sure the Met is thought of as a conservative institution in some quarters, I believe this is no time to be conservative. I don’t think we are thought of as conservative any longer. I think over the period of time that I’ve been here, things have changed dramatically." - Van

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');