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Across North America, 29 “Jazz Heroes”

Twenty-five years ago the Jazz Journalists Association began to identify and celebrate activists, advocates, altruists, aiders and abettors of jazz as members of an “A Team,” soon renamed “Jazz Heroes.” Today the JJA announced its 2025 slate of these Heroes, 29 people across North America who put extraordinary efforts into sustaining and expanding jazz in its various forms. So who...

What’s an Orchestra For? — and The Crisis in “Soft Power” Diplomacy

A montage from Peter Bogdanoff’s continuous visual track for the SDSO “New World Encounters” concert Addressing high school students in

A Case for Support: Forklift Danceworks Uses the Art of Dance to Tell the Stories of Real, Essential Workers

Studs Terkel would have been proud of this remarkably impactful nonprofit arts organization. ...

Finding a Mahler Message for Today

My review of Karol Berger’s Mahler’s Symphonic World: Music for the Age of Uncertainty – “Finding a Mahler Message for Today” –

Yuval Sharon talks about the role of the arts in a rapidly changing world

Yuval Sharon, Artistic Director of Detroit Opera, talks about their historic upcoming productions and the role of the arts within a rapidly changing society.

Nonprofit Arts Success in a Changing Environment, Tip 6 — Don’t Talk About It; Do It.

Doing the right thing is always the right thing to do. It’s right there in the phrase. ...

Lou Chen talks about the important role of the arts in immigrant communities

Lou Chen, CEO of InTempo, talks about the important role of the arts in immigrant communities.

Thinking of Gregory Corso’s ‘Happy Birthday of Death’

Not ready for his closeup.

Nonprofit Arts Success in a Changing Environment, Tip 5 — You Can’t Do It Alone

The work to deprogram cultish minds is dangerous. Get help. Lots of it. ...

On the aesthetic education of the young

From Book III of The Republic, by Plato (circa 375 BCE, translation by F. M. Cornford). Socrates is speaking with Glaucon: One thing, however, is easily settled, namely that grace and seemliness of form and movement go with good rhythm; ungracefulness and unseemliness with bad. Naturally. And again, good or bad rhythm and also tunefulness or discord in music go with the...

Revisiting Dublin through an Arts Research Blog Post

In deference to St. Patrick’s Day, I’m reposting an entry from ten years ago. Titled “Yeats and the Economics of Creativity,” it originally ran on the Arts Endowment website on May 7, 2025. Last month, at the invitation of the U.S. Embassy in Dublin, I took part in a conference titled “Creative Minds: The Importance of the Creative Economy in...

André Gremillet shares about their new Opera & Humanities Festival focused on reconciliation.

André Gremillet, CEO of The Cleveland Orchestra, talks about their new Opera & Humanities Festival focused on reconciliation.

What was I thinking?

“There is no simple explanation for anything important any of us do, and the human tragedy, or the human irony, consists in the necessity of living with the consequences of actions performed under the pressure of compulsions so obscure we do not and cannot understand them.” Hugh MacLennan, The Watch that Ends the Night (1959).

Nonprofit Arts Success in a Changing Environment, Tip 4 — You Can’t Tell Rhinoceroses They’re Dumb Animals

Nor can you force them to admit they were wrong. Because they’re, you know, rhinoceroses. ...

Gabriela Ortiz talks about the ethos that fuels her creativity

Gabriela Ortiz, Grammy Award-Winning Composer & Carnegie Hall’s Debs Composer’s Chair, shares the ethos that drives her creativity!

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