ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

MUSIC

After 51 Years, A Boston New Music Institution Calls It Quits

Boston is losing an essential purveyor of invigorating new music — after 51 years, 109 commissions, 20 recordings, and 243 world premieres. Until now, BMV has stood as the country’s oldest professional ensemble dedicated to contemporary music. - Boston Globe

How Lilith Fair Changed Music 25 Years Ago

For the artists and fans who experienced it, Lilith Fair felt revolutionary. It's success upended concert industry norms and created a new place where female artistry could evolve and flourish. - NPR

Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture” Has Been An Orchestra Favorite For The Fourth Of July.  But Not So Much This Year

"Some groups decided to skip it, arguing that its bellicose themes would be offensive during wartime. Others, eager to show solidarity with Ukraine, added renditions of the Ukrainian national anthem to their programs to counter the overture's exaltation of czarist Russia. Still others are reworking it." - The New York Times

Shocked And Confused: Why Is Montreal’s McGill Conservatory Of Music Suddenly Shutting Down?

Administrators said the Conservatory had gone from 550 students in pre-pandemic years to 300 last year, to a projection of less than 100 students next year. This drop in enrollment was one of several factors that made the institution “no longer financially viable nor sustainable.” - La Scena Musicale

Why Pittsburgh Festival Opera Is Not Putting On Any Operas This Year

Faced with the challenges of simply surviving as a small independent company post-pandemic, PFO — noting that there's more grant money available for educational endeavors than for basic production and performance — will focus on its Young Artist Program. - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Peter Gelb On Reinventing The Met Opera

"I’m sure the Met is thought of as a conservative institution in some quarters, I believe this is no time to be conservative. I don’t think we are thought of as conservative any longer. I think over the period of time that I’ve been here, things have changed dramatically." - Van

A Little Dust-Up Over Opera And Classism In Britain’s Parliament

Boris's deputy, Dominic Raab, took a potshot at Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner (a longtime union rep proud of her working-class roots) for going to posh Glyndebourne while railway workers were striking.  Rayner (who paid all of £62 for her ticket) had a couple of choice replies. - Classic FM (UK)

The Bells Of Notre-Dame And The Sounds You Never Knew They’ve Been Making

Large cast-metal bells like the ten at the Paris cathedral (they survived the 2019 fire) emit sounds all the time: when they're not actively ringing, they vibrate in sympathy with the various sounds around them. Bill Santana has recorded those vibrations and fashioned them into a sound installation. - Smithsonian Magazine

The Benefits Of A Long Career In One Orchestra

In this respect, the orchestral world is like a throwback to the postwar employment landscape, when it was not uncommon to spend your entire career in a single job, or at least working for a single company. - San Francisco Chronicle

The One American City Where Contemporary Classical Music Has Become The Norm

Mark Swed: "New York, London, Berlin, Paris and Amsterdam happen to be historically vibrant centers of new music. ... But new music hasn't in those cities, as here, penetrated every pore of the classical music scene." - Yahoo! (Los Angeles Times)

Warm-Up Vocal Exercises From Three Very Different Classical Singing Disciplines

Singers of Western opera (Anthony Roth Costanzo), Cantonese opera (Pui Yan Li), and Carnatic (South Indian classical) music (Ganavya Doraiswamy) demonstrate what they do to warm up and exercise their voices and how their particular exercise help them. - Smithsonian Magazine

Vinyl Is Having Supply Chain Issues

But it's not directly because of COVID - it's more that "dozens of record-pressing factories have been built to try to meet demand in North America — and it's still not enough." - St. Louis Post-Dispatch (AP)

San Diego Opera’s Ticket Sales This Season Were $1 Million Below Projections, But The Company Has A Surplus

Thank heaven for COVID relief grants.  And advance ticket sales for the coming season look promising. - The San Diego Union-Tribune

The Weird Wonderfulness Of Going Back To Glastonbury

If arriving onsite is a slightly discombobulating experience at first – even for a seasoned Glastonbury-goer, the sheer volume of people feels weirdly overwhelming after spending a significant proportion of the past two years locked in your home. - The Guardian

Lost Masters? John Mauceri’s “War On Music”

Conductor John Mauceri has released a study of the forgetting of so much classical music, especially music composed in America by refugees from Nazi-dominated Europe. - The Critic

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