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Canadian Conductor Boris Brott Hit, Killed By Hit-And-Run Car

Brott was a pedestrian involved in a hit-and-run incident. Following the news of his death, social media tributes poured in from the Canadian classical music community, including the Hamilton-based festival that bears his name. - The Globe and Mail (Canada)

Two-Time Oscar-Winning Director Asghar Farhadi In Iranian Court On Charge Of Plagiarism

The somewhat confusing case — earlier reports that the director had been convicted were later denied — concerns Farhadi's A Hero, an Oscar-nominee this year.  A former student claims Farhadi stole the idea for his film from a documentary she made in a workshop he ran in 2014. - Yahoo! (Los Angeles Times)

Baltimore Symphony’s New CEO: Mark Hanson, Formerly Of San Francisco Symphony

"Hanson, 48, who already has led two orchestras larger than the BSO" — the San Francisco and Houston Symphonies — "will begin his new job April 21. He succeeds Peter Kjome, who announced his resignation as the BSO's president and CEO in the spring of 2021." - The Baltimore Sun

Palace Of Versailles Reopens The Tennis Court Where French Democracy Was Born (Wait, What?)

The Jeu de Paume room was built in 1686 for Louis XIV to play the game of the same name, an ancestor of modern tennis. At the start of the French Revolution in 1789, that room — now restored and reopened — was where the National Constituent Assembly was created. - Yahoo! (AFP)

Getty Trust Names NYU’s Provost Its New CEO

"The world's wealthiest arts institution, the J. Paul Getty Trust, has selected a new president and CEO: New York University Provost Katherine E. Fleming. Fleming will replace longtime chief James Cuno, who has led the institution for more than a decade and will retire this summer." - Yahoo! (Los Angeles Times)

Attempts To Ban Books From US Libraries More Than Quadrupled In 2021

The annual report from the American Library Association said that there were 729 challenges to books in school, university, and public libraries in 2021, up from 157 in 2020. Many of those challenges covered more than one book: the total number of individual titles contested was 1,597. - NPR

Classical Grammy Winners: LA Phil’s Mahler 8th, Met’s “Akhnaten”, Philly’s Florence Price, Caroline Shaw

The Philadelphia Orchestra's release of Price's First and Third Symphonies took Best Orchestral Performance, while Dudamel's Mahler Eighth from Los Angeles won Best Choral Performance and Philip Glass's Akhnaten Best Opera Performance. Among other winners: Jennifer Koh, Emanuel Ax & Yo-Yo Ma, Caroline Shaw's Narrow Sea. - San Francisco Classical Voice

New York Times Officially Names Zachary Woolfe Classical Music Critic

In a long-expected move, Woolfe, who became the Times's classical music editor in 2015, succeeds Anthony Tommasini, who retired as chief classical critic last year. (That Woolfe's title does not include "chief" would seem to indicate that the Times doesn't plan to hire another staff critic.) - The New York Times

Visionary Detroit Symphony Chief Anne Parsons, 64

Determined to avoid another labor dispute and eager to make the orchestra a pillar of Detroit’s civic revival, she spent the next decade rebuilding the ensemble. The Detroit Symphony, digitally connected and agile, became a model modern ensemble. - The New York Times

Old Wax Cylinder Recordings To Be Heard For The First Time In 100 Years

The earliest, putty-colored cylinders deteriorate after only a few dozen listens if played on the Edison machines; they crack if you hold them too long in your hand. And because the wax tubes themselves were unlabeled, many of them remain mysteries. - NPR

Joseph Stalin, Intellectual?

“Stalin was no psychopath but an emotionally intelligent and feeling intellectual. Indeed, it was the power of his emotional attachment to deeply held beliefs that enabled him to sustain decades of brutal rule." - The New Statesman

The Hermitage Has Become Isolated

Once a leader in Russian cultural diplomacy overseas, the Hermitage is now isolated by the cultural boycotts of Russia that have multiplied through the western world since the war began. - The Art Newspaper

The Good And Bad Of Virtue Signaling

Virtue signalling is more nuanced and more interesting than the picture painted by conventional wisdom and political rhetoric. As it turns out, there are bad and good things about virtue signalling – but probably not for the reasons you think. - Aeon

Uffizi Became Italy’s Most-Visited Attraction Last Year

Once a slow-changing bastion of tradition, it was announced on Monday that the institution famous for its Renaissance masterpieces had last year leapt past Rome’s Colosseum, the ruins of Pompeii, the Vatican Museums and other well-known sites. - The Guardian

Where Aaron Sorkin Found What Atticus Finch Has In Common With Donald Trump

Adapting Mockingbird for the stage, Sorkin knew Atticus shouldn't be an icon of rectitude. "I realized I didn't have to create a flaw for Atticus, that he already had one. It's just that it had been presented to us as a virtue." What was that flaw? - MSN (The Boston Globe)

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