ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

MUSIC

Ten Years After An Aborted Shutdown, San Diego Opera Announces Ambitious Five-Year Expansion Plan

"How ambitious? It will require raising an additional $10.5 million over the next five years to fund the expansion of live performances; the re-establishment of the resident artist program; the commissioning of new operas; the reimagining of its audience engagement programs, and more." - The San Diego Union-Tribune (MSN)

Metropolitan Opera Settles Decade-Long Case With Mezzo Who Was Injured Onstage

During a 2011 performance of Gounod's Faust, Wendy White was injured when a piece of scenery collapsed and she fell eight feet. In 2013 she sued for negligence, seeking compensation for lost wages, medical care, and pain. Days before the trial was to begin, the parties have settled. - The New York Times

“The Worst Insult I Ever Heard As An Opera Singer” (A Letter To The Atlantic’s Advice Column)

"Recently, I was playing guitar and singing a cute little country ditty that required no vocal skill. My sister-in-law, who was listening, exclaimed, 'That was so beautiful. It’s the first time I’ve ever heard your real voice.' She’s been hearing me sing for 40 years." - The Atlantic (MSN)

How DIY Has Transformed The Music Industry

One of the most significant shifts has been the rise of DIY artists. These independent musicians take on roles traditionally held by record labels and managers, such as producing, recording, promoting and distributing their music. - The Conversation

How To Get Hooked On Opera

Operas deal with all of life’s big issues, from unrequited love to the death of a loved one. They address social issues too: political rivalries, malign power, toxic male violence. Listening to opera can be highly cathartic, a way of making sense of your own emotions and the world’s problems. - Psyche

San Francisco Opera Extends Music Director Eun Sun Kim’s Contract

The South Korean-born conductor, who began her initial five-year term at the company in 2021, is now contracted through the 2030-31 season. - San Francisco Classical Voice

Lydian String Quartet Dismissed By University Where It Was On Faculty For 44 Years

Facing declining enrollment and tighter finances, Brandeis University (near Boston) has — effective at the end of this academic year, and over the furious objections of the music department's chair — eliminated the ensemble's four positions, which constitute 25% of the department's faculty. - The Justice (Waltham, Mass.)

San Antonio Philharmonic Inks Agreement For New Venue That Needs Millions’ Worth of Upgrades

The venue, of which the orchestra will have partial ownership, is the old Scottish Rite of Freemasonry hall downtown, which has, per music director Jeffrey Kahane, excellent acoustics. The building also has years of deferred maintenance; $5 million to $10 million will be necessary just to make it safe. - San Antonio Report

The Rich Hidden World Of The Music Archivist

For every song that is in print and available, there are at least 10 that are mothballed in storage, an estimated 2.5m pieces that may as well not exist. Popular taste has decreed that these lost songs are failures. But tastes change, markets shift and yesterday’s flop might be today’s buried treasure. - The Guardian

Can AI Be Taught To Sing Opera?

The challenge of how to bridge the final gap for synthetic voices will occupy scientists for a while to come. Along the way, opera does feel like an apt forum in which to explore the ethical dilemmas and expressive aspirations behind engineered voices. - The New York Times

Decline Of The Working Musician

Some of the musicians have mixed feelings about their chosen careers. “It depends on the day,. Today I feel like a tired old whore. Some days I feel like a god. Most of the time I feel like an ambitious T-shirt salesman with entitlement issues.” - The New Yorker

Composer Max Richter On The Most Streamed Classical Album Of All Time, And Working With Margaret Atwood

Richter’s 8.5-hour Sleep, based on the neuroscience of sleeping, is 10 years old, and still popular. But the composer’s newest music is for a ballet based on Margaret Atwood’s 2013 book MaddAdam. - The Observer (UK)

Looks, Ten; Sound, Exciting

The remodeled symphony hall in San Diego has stepped up, as has its entire neighborhood. But how does it sound? - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

Why Concert Halls Still Matter Enough That We Spend Hundreds of Millions Of Dollars Building And Renovating Them

"A room that’s consecrated to music is one where people come together, sit in quiet communion, listen rather than shout, and focus for a couple of hours instead of getting peppered with notifications. … Such an institution is one of the few sacramental spaces we have outside of explicitly religious buildings." - Curbed (MSN)

Hard To Take, But More Right Than Ever: Jeremy Denk On The Music Of Charles Ives

"You do not see advertisers beating at the door of the Ives estate to use his music in commercials. His music is not ready to package or post on Instagram. But there is knowledge in it. … His music suggests America will just have to muddle through." - The New York Times

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');