ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

MUSIC

What Drove The 60s Boom In British Jazz

"In 1966, 1968 – this was a time of liberation. We were all involved in anti-apartheid marches, CND marches, embracing different cultures. It all fed into the music and brought a freedom to it." - The Guardian

San Francisco’s War Memorial Opera House Gets New, Roomier Seats

San Francisco Opera chief Matthew Shilvock: "The seats have historically been patrons' No. 1 concern for the building. Letters to me. Letters to the box office. Letters to the city. And with some justification. We had springs coming through some of the seats." - The New York Times

Music Teacher Makes Interactive Map Of 500 Forgotten Women Composers

 “We’ve never given them the place they deserve in history. They don’t appear in musical history books, their works aren’t played at concerts and their music isn’t recorded.” - The Guardian

Ravinia Recreates Leonard Bernstein In An Immersive Experience

What sticks, at least on a first viewing, is the technology at play—the light, the sound, the figures that look real enough to embrace. - Chicago Reader

A Leader Of Afghan Music’s Revival On Whether 20 Years Of Progress Will Disappear

"I'm hopeful that the Taliban learned that music is part of the cultural identity of any nation. And I hope that the Taliban also learned that a community, a society, or a nation that does not respect their own culture — that nation cannot exist." - Van

A Classical Recording Engineer Explains What Exactly He Does

"What you think of as a good photograph of you might not actually be the truth in how it presents you – that can also be the case with sound. … It's about presenting the (music) in somebody's home in as convincing a manner as possible." - Gramophone

Thomas Quasthoff Is Singing Again — But Only Jazz

The acclaimed bass-baritone experimented with jazz (including one album) before he made a surprise retirement announcement in 2012. Now, at age 62, he says: "It's a different kind of singing, but I have now learned a new instrument – the microphone – and I love it." - The Guardian

Curtis Institute Lets Go Its Longtime Star Oboe Teacher

Richard Woodhams, who retired after 40 years as the Philadelphia Orchestra's principal oboist in 2018, was told by the music school that his teaching contract will not be renewed. No reason has been given other than "Curtis has decided to move in a different direction." - The Philadelphia Inquirer

Marc Ribot: Why I Have To Play My Music Super-Loud

Audiologists say this could make one’s ears howl, create an uncomfortable sensation of density in one’s head, and eventually make it impossible to hear human conversation. Yet I persist . . . Why? - LitHub

In Praise of The Lowly Lullaby

Individuals who heard them as babies relied on them, decades later, as parents and grandparents. Not even the symphony or fugue or sonata can boast such endurance or efficacy. - Ted Gioia

In New York, Everywhere’s A State Of Mind Right Now

Performers fanned out across the city to play Billy Joel's 1976 hit in a new music video meant to improve, er, New York's state of mind. - The New York Times

Salzburg Reckons With Its Past

Jewish artists brought the annual festival to life, before the Nazis swept them away. But even before the Nazis came to power in Austria, "There was much hostility against the ‘theater Jews’ from Vienna." - The New York Times

The Concert Business Goes Through Whiplash As Delta Variant Spreads

"Concert promoters, like other arts executives, are hoping that velvet ropes of vaccination requirements around cultural events can serve as an incentive for fans to get the shot." - The New York Times

Exploring The Door-Closing Chimes Of The World’s Subway Systems

"Ted Green has been collecting … the telltale chimes — beeps, ding-dongs, jingles and arpeggios that warn riders around the world to stand clear." In Rio, it sounds like a bossa nova guitar; in Delhi, like a doorbell; in Montreal, like Aaron Copland. - The New York Times

Trove Of Intact Late-19th-Century Opera Sets Discovered In Old Colorado Mining Town

The collection of flats and drops had been languishing in the attic of the Tabor Opera House in Leadville. The theater was built by Horace Tabor, whose marriages and financial ruin were chronicled in Douglas Moore's opera The Ballad of Baby Doe. - 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');