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AJBlogs

“Hope for the Best. Expect the Worst.”

You need to find a way to justify your worth to your community — and at the same time, prepare ...

Karen Ewald talks about arts leadership during adversity

Karen Ewald, Executive Director of the Hawaii State Foundation on Culture & the Arts, talks about leadership during adversity including the Lahaina fires.

On the hidden economics of live theatre

Freakonomics Radio has a new three part series on the economic landscape facing live theatre. Part One is here, and part two is here, which as a supporting act in an episode with Lin-Manuel Miranda, has me trying to coherently explain cost disease in the theatre, where it comes from and its implications. Part three will come next week,...

Bernstein, Balanchine, Ellington and the Waning of “Soft Power”

Kabalevsky contratulates Bernstein Today’s online Persuasion/The American Purpose runs an essay of mine building on the growing awareness that “soft power”

That Gaze Is a Gaze of Suspicion

And what does she suspect? Yes, you guessed it. Skulduggery.

Nonprofit Arts Organizations: Beware “A Little Knowledge”

Forcing data to reach a conclusion causes nonprofit arts organizations to issue pronouncements that just aren’t so. ...

What to do with the NEA? Make it Conservative?

In my last post I wrote about the Cato Institute’s Ryan Bourne’s call to eliminate the National Endowment for the Arts. Here I will consider a different approach from the right, Mark Bauerlein’s “MAGA needs High Art, Not just Kid Rock”, from the New York Times. He writes about the National Endowment for the Humanities as well as the NEA, but I...

Jeffrey Sposato shares his strategy behind building a music department for the City of Detroit

Jeffrey Sposato, Chair of Wayne State University’s Department of Music, shares his ethos of building a music department for the City of Detroit.

Anatomy of a Rebound: The Arts in the U.S. Economy

https://youtube.com/watch?v=B9Ro0GWVKFU&feature=oembed

What do to with the NEA? Pull the plug?

Two opinion pieces were published this week giving different conservative takes on what to do with the NEA. I’ll talk about Mark Bauerlein’s New York Times Op-Ed in the next post; here I look at the Cato Institute’s Ryan Bourne’s briefing paper “End the National Endowment for the Arts”. To begin I’ll skip all the way to his last paragraph, which begins: There...

“An Urgent Priority” — R. I. P.: NEH (1965-2025) — A Postscript

Here’s a postscript to my obituary for the National Endowment of the Humanities, and for my own Music Unwound national

Advocacy for the Nonprofit Arts Sector is Currently Meaningless

Lost amid a string of inside-baseball phrases and ideologies, officials have little idea as to why they would possibly fund ...

Schubert and the Music of Exhaustion

The supreme string quartet, for me, has long been Schubert’s last, in G major — memorably performed last Friday night

R. I. P. : The National Endowment for the Humanities (1965-2005)

Since 2010 I have administered Music Unwound, a national consortium of orchestras and educational institutions funded by the National Endowment

Robert Taylor shares methods to inspire through diverse repertoire

Robert Taylor, Director of Bands and Professor of Conducting at Northwestern University’s Bienen School of Music, shares his approach to diverse repertoire and inspiring individual voices in group ensembles.

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