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MUSIC

From The American Youth Symphony’s Ashes, A New Orchestra Quickly Arose

"Conductor Anthony Parnther and the Musicians at Play Foundation speedily formed a new training orchestra, Civic Orchestra of Los Angeles, and scheduled an inaugural concert for April 28, on the same weekend that AYS was supposed to play the final concert of its season." - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

Washington National Opera Offers A New Ending For Puccini’s “Turandot”

Puccini died before composing the final scene, and many find the standard ending by Franco Alfano unsatisfying. This alternative by composer Christopher Tin and librettist Susan Soon He Stanton has a better reason for Princess Turandot executing her suitors than the centuries-old rape and murder of an ancestor. - AP

Evelyn Glennie On Music As A Physical Phenomenon In Your Body

I’m not a medical person, but we do know that sound is about vibration. The body is like a resonating chamber; every part of our body can be affected by sound. opening the body up as a resonator in order to perceive sound, you have a good appreciation of resonance. - San Francisco Classical Voice

The Kids’ Show “Bluey” Can Make Grownups Cry. What’s Its Secret? Classical Music, That’s What.

Musicologist Sarah Caissie Provost lays out the evidence. - Slate (Yahoo!)

100-Year-Old Sam Ash Music Stores To Close

Derek Ash, whose great-grandparents, Sam and Rose Ash, opened the first Sam Ash store in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn in 1924, said the company’s 42 locations could not compete in the era of online shopping. - The New York Times

Met Opera Had Only Four Female Conductors In Its First 133 Years. Last Month It Had Four In One Week.

From the company's opening in 1883 to eight years ago, there were only Sarah Caldwell (1976), Simone Young (1996), Jane Glover (2013), and Susanna Mälkki (2016). From April 19-26, 2024, there were Oksana Lyniv (Turandot), Speranza Scappucci (La Rondine), Marin Alsop (El Niño), and Xian Zhang (Madama Butterfly). - AP

The Many Crises Facing Opera

"The orchestral sector and the opera and ballet sectors are facing a funding crisis at the moment, which might mean that the focus is not really on changing the culture but just on survival. But that’s not an excuse." - The Stage

Fans Of Utah Symphony Fear That Its Concert Hall Could Be Torn Down

"The suggestion that the 45-year-old Abravanel Hall could be demolished or altered has been floated as Smith Entertainment Group — the company ... that owns the Utah Jazz and the state’s newly acquired National Hockey League franchise — begins planning for an 'entertainment district' adjacent to the teams’ home at Delta Center." - The Salt Lake Tribune

Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra’s Artistic Director Resigns; Musicians Vote No Confidence In Managing Director

Kyu-Young Kim cited "recent organizational decisions and shifts in priorities" for his decision, though he will continue as concertmaster. Subsequently, the 28 members of the SPCO musicians' union voted unanimously against the orchestra's president/managing director, Jon Limbacher, who has reduced the number of both performances and venues. - Star Tribune (Minneapolis) (MSN)

Tyshawn Sorey Wins Pulitzer Prize For Music For “Adagio (For Wadada Leo Smith)”

Sorey takes honors this year after having been a finalist last year for his Monochromatic Light (Afterlife). Adagio, which "moves at a glacial pace, (yet) holds its subject in steady focus," is written for alto saxophone soloist and orchestra and was commissioned by the Lucerne Festival and the Atlanta Symphony. - NPR

A Musicologist Explains Beyonce’s Cowboy Carter

At 78 minutes, Cowboy Carter is nearly as long as composer Dmitri Shostakovich’s epic Seventh Symphony (1941) and has structural similarities to symphonic music too. There are clear “movements” within the work in which certain lyrical and musical ideas are grouped together. - The Conversation

Marin Alsop In Search Of Her Next Act

At a time when orchestras are eager to connect with a broader swath of their communities, Alsop’s struggle to score a position at the very top of the field attests to the persistent lack of both Americans and women on the country’s most prestigious podiums. - The New York Times

Barenboim: What Beethoven’s 9th Means To Me (On The Piece’s 200th Anniversary)

"Music on its own does not stand for anything except itself. The greatness of music, and the Ninth Symphony, lies in the richness of its contrasts. Music never just laughs or cries; it always laughs and cries at the same time. Creating unity out of contradictions — that is Beethoven for me." - The New York Times

How Orchestra Conductors Have Changed

The reason conductors have changed is that the musicians they lead have changed. And the reason the musicians they lead have changed is that the societies those musicians inhabit have changed. That doesn’t necessarily render the music-making we experience any less intense or meaningful. - Gramophone

The Musicians Suspended From The NY Phil After That Article About Sexual Assault Have Sued To Get Their Jobs Back, Again

"Matthew Muckey, associate principal trumpet, and Liang Wang, principal oboist of the New York Philharmonic, have filed federal lawsuits against both the orchestra and the musicians’ union Local 802.” Their first appeals worked in 2020, which made the New York Magazine story all the more difficult to read. - Broadway World

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