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MUSIC

Opera, Careers, And Jealousy

I am a jealous opera singer. When I’m in the audience of any opera production, at least once I’ll think to myself, “It could be me up there.” This statement is true: the opera industry is unjust and random. - Van

Audience Member Sues Madonna And Live Nation For Ambushing Him With “Pornography”

While he's also angry that the concert started late, the arena was hot, and Madonna was lip-synching, his legal complaint says, "During the performance plaintiff was forced to watch topless women on stage simulating sex acts. Plaintiff felt like he was watching a pornographic film being made." - The Guardian

Songs For Working

"When was the last time you passed a worksite and heard their radio playing music that had something to do with their work, or with the rhythm and tempo of their work? Music has become detached—or, to use a Marxist term, alienated—from work and from the worker." - Nautilus

Why San Francisco Opera Is Getting Trauma Counselors For Kaija Saariaho’s “Innocence”

"(The company) has developed trauma trainings, a symposium, and post-performance discussions to help guide people through the heavy subject matter" — a mass shooting at a high school and the unexpected effect the atrocity has on a wedding ten years later. Counselors are available for the cast as well. - San Francisco Classical Voice

Kaija Saariaho’s Harrowing Final Opera Arrives In The U.S., Where It Will Be Even More Fraught

Innocence, as the work is called, has been hugely impressing (and depressing) audiences and critics in Europe since its 2021 premiere at the Aix-en-Provence Festival. Why will it be even more loaded in the States? Because it's about a school shooting — and its aftereffects 10 years later. - AP

Jaap Van Zweden’s Strange, Abbreviated Tenure At The New York Philharmonic

He departs this month after only six seasons, three of those cut short by the COVID pandemic. And, while proud of his work there, he acknowledges his discomfort not only with unfavorable reviews, but with the high-wattage celebrity aura that prominent figures need in New York. - The New York Times

Conductor Jan Latham-Koenig Given Suspended Prison Sentence For Attempting To Solicit Sex From A Minor

"(He) had admitted arranging sex acts with someone he thought was a teenager, but was in fact an undercover police officer. … On Tuesday, the 70-year-old was given a 14-month prison sentence, suspended for two years." - The Standard (London)

Yuja Wang’s Fashion Forward Art

What would happen if a male pianist chose to highlight his body in a similar way? Some boundaries have yet to be tested. - The New Yorker

Why Songwriters and Publishers Are Fighting With Spotify

Their dispute stems from SPOT’s controversial decision to reclassify its Premium tiers as ‘bundles’ by combining music and audiobooks, which has resulted in Spotify paying a lower mechanical royalty rate in the US to publishers and songwriters than standalone music subscription services. - Music Business Worldwide

Missy Mazzoli Is Composing An Opera About The Opioids Crisis

The Galloping Cure, with a story and libretto by Karen Russell (author of the novel Swamplandia!) and Royce Vavrek (possibly America's busiest librettist), will be directed by Tom Morris (who co-directed War Horse) and produced by former ENO chief John Berry, with four major opera houses on board. - The Observer (UK)

Inside Pacific Symphony’s Music Director Search

It’s been a golden period for top-shelf conductors seeking a new gig – and a more competitive time for orchestras looking to hire one. - Culture OC

Pittsburgh Symphony Provides $125 Million In Economic Impact To Its Region

"For every dollar the symphony spends, it generates about $4 in the local economy, leading to a total of $125 million in regional impact for (FY2023-24). Plus, the symphony, which operates with a budget of about $33 million, helps sustain about 1,900 jobs in the region annually." - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

What The LiveNation/TicketMaster Lawsuit Might Mean

Live Nation is essentially a monopoly, the government argues. Its complaint notes the concert giant directly manages more than 400 musical artists, controls around 60 percent of concert promotions at major concert venues across the country, and owns or controls more than 265 concert venues in North America - Washington Post

Accessing Jaap van Zweden’s Tenure At The New York Philharmonic

The ensemble’s playing, across all instrumental choirs, sounds richer and more flexible than it did before his tenure. So what Mr. Dudamel stands to inherit largely bears Mr. van Zweden’s stamp. - The Wall Street Journal

How A Gifted Black Musician Lost Tenure At The Kansas City Symphony, And How He’s Fighting Back

Principal percussionist Josh Jones was told over and over that his audition was the best people had ever heard, and he regularly got high praise from the music director. Two years later, he was told his organizational skills were lacking and denied tenure. Was this really about race? - The Washington Post (MSN)

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