Whetstone, in a comment on my last post, pointed out that I didn't link to Twitter in the best way. i linked to the main site, not to my own page, so people who want to follow me have to search for me. Which only underlines my point about how much many of us have to learn about the new online world. You can reach me directly on Twitter right here.[Added later:] And thanks, everyone, for the lovely small explosion of Twitter followers and friend requests on Facebook!Also note, in the comments to my last post, the people who say they first got … [Read more...]
Archives for 2008
New culture (2)
First I should say that you can find me on Facebook, and follow me on Twitter. If you're on Facebook yourself, I'd be happy to be your friend. Just look for me, and friend me. I like what I've learned about social networking. I've made friends, reconnected with old friends, and done some useful networking. And the communications we all set up are a lot quicker, a lot more direct, and also a lot more fun than plain old e-mail. In at least one professional situation, I've strengthened contacts with some of the younger people involved much more … [Read more...]
New culture
Yesterday I was running errands in my car, and listening to Soundcheck, the really fine afternoon music talk show on WNYC (the public radio station in New York). They were marking a milestone in music video -- the cancellation of the only remaining show on MTV that still showed music videos.So what was the state of music videos now? Here's what I learned. Music videos have largely migrated to YouTube. They aren't pushed to music fans by any central provider. Fans seek them out on their own. And often the best and best-known videos aren't made … [Read more...]
Aww…
Here's a very sweet opera translation. Not quite English, but very honest, and supremely true to the spirit (if not the literacy) of the original. (Go here and here for previous posts, with terrific comments, about opera translations.) This is from liner notes to an aria recital album by the soprano Fabiana Bravo. It's an English (sort of) version of the first lines of that wonderful operatic chestnut, "Ebben? Ne andrò lontana," from Catalani's La Wally (otherwise known as the aria from the film Diva):Ebben? Ne andrò lontana,Come va l'eco della … [Read more...]
Short Talks
A week ago three little pieces of mine were played in Washington, DC -- or actually the first three I've written from a projected longer set. They're for piano, and the pianist also plays a drum. They're based on prose poems by Anne Carson, her Short Talks. Somehow I think there will be 11 of them in all, which is one of those artist's intuitions that's based on pure instinct. It's not as if I've gone through the poetry, and picked eight more texts. No, the number eleven just asserts itself, inside my mind. The pianist -- the pianist-drummer -- … [Read more...]
Snapshot of the new culture
My Wall Street Journal piece on Lukas Ligeti and Gabriel Kahane is out. Follow the link to read it. It's about two composers with mainstream classical fathers, but who write music that isn't wholly classical. In this, they're very much citizens of our new culture. Younger people (which by now means people 40 or younger, and maybe even many people older than that) don't make distinctions between high and popular culture, or at least not distinctions of value. That includes what used to be thought of as high culture values, like being … [Read more...]
Generational change
Tomorrow -- Saturday, October 18 -- I'll have a review in the Wall Street Journal, about CDs I like a lot, Lukas Ligeti's "Afrikan Machinery," and a self-titled debut from Gabriel Kahane.What ties these CDs together is an intriguing back story, about the emergence of a new generation of classical musicians, with new ideas. Both the artists I reviewed have famous fathers, Ligeti's being the Ligeti we all know, and Kahane's being Jeffrey Kahane, the pianist and conductor who's music director of the Colorado Symphony. And both artists combine … [Read more...]
Smart and honorable
Amazing, heartening followup to my recent post, about my students' ideas for what should have happened in Cleveland. I'm told that the Detroit Free Press, back in the '80s, actually did what my students recommended. Their critic back then gave bad reviews to the music director of the Detroit Symphony, who at that time was Gunther Herbig. That wasn't a comfortable situation, and symphony supporters made a fuss to the newspaper's publisher. But instead of caving in, the paper did something wonderfully smart and honorable. It brought in three … [Read more...]
Cleveland ideas
Yesterday, in my Juilliard class on music criticism, we talked about the critic mess in Cleveland. And two of my students, Vanessa Fralick and Ethan van Winkle, had really good ideas. They noted, as we all did, that it's really disgraceful for the Cleveland Plain Dealer to demote Don Rosenberg, its respected classical music critic, just because they're uncomfortable with his negative reviews of the Cleveland Orchestra's music director. The fullest, most plausible defense of what they did is in a column by Ted Diadiun, the paper's reader … [Read more...]
Myths
A week ago Saturday, October 5, the Wall Street Journal ran an essay by Leon Botstein, college president and conductor. Title? "The Unsung Success of Live Classical Music." Theme? Classical music is healthy, and not at all declining. Content? One myth after another. I couldn't post about this here, because I didn't have time. But the myths have to be exploded. For instance: ...looking out at the audience at most classical music concerts in the United States, one sees a crowd that is largely middle-aged, verging on the geriatric. This has … [Read more...]
Terrific time
We're back -- my wife Anne Midgette and I have finished our whirlwind three-day residency at the College of Music at Florida State University. Anne, as of course I've said here many times, is the chief classical music critic at the Washington Post. We had a terrific time. And then, as soon as I got back, I conferred intently with people from a notable music school, and then had a performance of my music. But more on those things later.What Anne and I (and in a couple of cases one of us separately) did at FSU: • spoke to … [Read more...]
Being somebody
I was listening to Il giuramento, an opera by Mercadante, the top dog among 19th century Italian opera composers whose work hasn't survived in the repertoire. He writes smooth melodies, whips up at least the appearance of drama, and expertly handles every aspect of the 19th century Italian style. So what's missing? I'd put it this way -- his characters never grab you, singing (as a subtext to whatever their words are) "I am somebody!" (To borrow Jesse Jackson's phrase.) Listen, by contrast, to just about any Verdi aria. Verdi's characters are … [Read more...]
More on titles
I loved the comments on my recent post on opera titles. They built a safety net under my limited Italian, provided wonderful examples of the things I was talking about, and took my ideas a lot further. And I want to sent a happy shout to Cori Ellison, who commented, who works professionally with titles, and provides a point of view that the rest of us don't have. It all makes me want to state, or restate, some general points.First, it strikes me that we tend to think of titles as purely explanatory, a neutral element in an opera performance. … [Read more...]
WTF
A New York Times story says today that the New York City Opera will lay off 11 full-time employees. That's 13% of their staff. The company, as quoted in the story, says it needs fewer staff members this year because, well, basically the company won't be giving any normal performances. And there's of course an economic factor, too. Says a spokesman, quoted by the Times, the company "believes that this reorganization will position the opera to deal with current economic conditions." This leads to a cascade of questions. Did the company need … [Read more...]
Berlioz in Opera News
I have a piece on Berlioz's operas in the new issue of Opera News. You can read it online here. It was fun to write -- I didn't know Benvenuto Cellini well, and didn't know Béatrice et Bénédict at all. Was very surprised to find out that B&B is a dud, in spite of a ravishing duet at the end of the first act. (Which has nothing to do with the plot -- one sign of the things that make the opera a dud, at least for me.) Among the many delights I had was listening to the first Colin Davis recording of Cellini, which I think is one of the great … [Read more...]