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Showing posts from February, 2011

Perlman Leaves Westchester Phil

Itzhak Perlman, whose contract was up in June, resigned today as music director of the Westchester Philharmonic. The orchestra is facing serious financial troubles, and is late with their paychecks to both Perlman and orchestra musicians. Clearly, having Perlman didn't help the bottom line: he started in 2007, and contributions fell 31% between 2008 and 2009. There is no replacement conductor for the April 16 and 17 concerts;  Jaime Laredo will step in to conduct on May 14 and 1 5. Back in November, I took the family to hear the orchestra at Purchase College with Chelsea Tipton . Tipton's not famous, but the orchestra sounded crisp and spirited with him, and the program was stimulating. The Westchester Philharmonic can't afford big names anyway; building on the strength of the orchestra and interesting programing is probably the way to go. 

Detroit Musicians' Negotiating Committee Says "Vote No"

As Drew McManus points out, both Detroit papers are reporting that the Detroit Symphony musicians' negotiating committee is recommending rejection of management's deal to end the strike. The  Detroit Free Press quotes spokesman Haden McKay, who says that the offer "did not meet our minimum requirements." The Detroit News is saying that the committee felt management pulled a bait-and-switch, agreeing to things on Wednesday night in negotiations, only to leave them out in the agreement they delivered the next morning.

Orchestra Death Watch: Detroit Musicians Get A "Final Offer"

The Detroit Symphony management presented its "final offer" last night to striking musicians . They'd like the musicians to vote on the offer by Thursday night; the union's response pretty much typifies their tone and approach up until now: ... according [to] musicians' spokesman Greg Bowens, the union's bylaws require a 72-hour waiting period after any proposal is submitted before a vote can be taken. He said if the contract offer was e-mailed to the union at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday as the DSO said, then 72 hours would mean a Friday evening vote. "Management," said Bowens, "should have taken this into account."

NEA Chairman to the Arts: Talk to the Invisible Hand

There's just too much artsy stuff out there and not enough time. It's a problem we face here in New York City. NEA chairman Rocco Landesman wants to solve it for us . "You can either increase demand or decrease supply," says Landesman, as reported in the  Washington Post this past weekend. "Demand is not going to increase. So it is time to think about decreasing supply." Michael Kaiser, who recently criticized arts organizations for timidity in programming , s tood up for the little guy in his response: "My biggest problem with thinning out the field is that what people typically mean is: Thin out the smallest, weakest, least developed." Landesman's comments came before Obama on Monday proposed cutting NEA funding , but the Washington Post article does note that Landesman may have been preparing people for the tough times ahead.

Maybe Michael Kaiser Just Isn't Looking in the Right Places

On Sequenza21, Armondo Bayalo claims that Michael Kaiser is "just plain wrong about the state of the art"--and then proceeds to tell us all the reasons why he's right. Bayalo's real point isn't that Kaiser is wrong, but that he is only right within his own big-arts frame of reference. He doesn't see all the great stuff that's going in "smaller, leaner operations" than the Kennedy Center: Fair enough, but part of the problem is that the funders and fundraisers who hold the purse strings aren't willing to invest in those grass-roots groups so that they can grow.

I Want to Know What Rock Music Michael Kaiser's Been Listening To

Kennedy Center president and one-note high-culture pundit Michael Kaiser called out arts presenters for a lack of imagination yesterday on his Huffington Post blog. "The embracing of new technologies and the willingness to try new things seem to have become more the province of rock music and movies," says Kaiser. "The classical arts have simply not kept up." Who's to blame? Administrators, says the guy who founded a school for arts managers . ... groups of people are now more responsible for arts making than the individual. Boards, managers and producing consortia are overly-involved.  And these groups are misbehaving. They are overly-conservative, subject to "group think" and so worried about budgets that they forget that bad art hurts budgets far more than risk-taking does. Kaiser tends to repeat the same argument whenever he writes--and it makes a certain amount of intuitive sense. At least for music. When I read Kaiser's post, I think ...

Better Know a Composer: Wallingford Riegger

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Maybe it was because he was a communist, but you don't hear much about Wallingford Riegger anymore. Two years before Riegger went in front of the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1957, Gilbert Chase made a point in his book America's Music of singling out the composer as "the leading native-born American composer who composes with twelve tones." Granted, that's a pretty small group to be out in front of, but you get the point: Riegger was generally well respected, a composer who had emerged from the hotbed of avant-garde musical activity in 1920s New York City with a style at once daring and grounded in traditional technique. He was flaky, but not too flaky. Dichotomy (1931-2) is one of his earliest works that typify what Riegger was all about, the first piece of his that showed the maturity he would later exhibit in his third and fourth symphonies. His earliest success here in the US (he studied in Germany for a few years) was his Study in Sono...

Go See My In-Laws' Art

If you're in Charlotte in March, take some time to check out my father-in-law's and sister-in-law's show at the Max L. Jackson Gallery at Queens University . Sabrina (the sister-in-law) is up  at the Vermont College of Fine Arts . She sculpts metal, using blacksmithing tools to create some beautiful, surprisingly delicate work. I think you'll enjoy it. Murray (the father-in-law) studied art at Florida State University--and took piano lessons with Dohnanyi while he was there. Between then and now, he joined the Air Force, "worked for the government," went to medical school and became a doctor, got married, raised his children, and started painting again. The show runs all March, but there's a reception on March 10, 5-7 PM .

Better Know a Composer: Roy Harris (Part II)

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On Facebook, Joe McKesson celebrated the birthday of Roy Harris  (1898-1979) yesterday. Part II is here . Harris's Third Symphony (1939) is his most famous work, but I also like the music on the Louisville Orchestra's recordings from 1960: his concert piece Kentucky Spring , Violin Concerto, and Symphony No. 5, all written in the late 1940s.

Better Know a Composer: Roy Harris

As Beth Levy points ou t, you'll see the words log cabin , Oklahoma , and Lincoln  in the opening sentence of almost every biography ever written about Roy Harris. Although he was a Sooner for only five years, almost everyone in music circles identified him as being quintessentially Western. Arts patron Mary Churchill had this to say about her meeting with Harris in Paris, where he was studying in the late 1920s: "[he was] wild and worn; but gave off a wonderful western farmer air in the middle of the Place de la Concorde." Serge Koussevitzky said that "nobody has captured in music the essence of American life--its vitality, its greatness, its strength--so well as Roy Harris." That Harris shared a birthday with Lincoln-- both were born on February 12 --only added to the mystique. Harris (1898-1979) certainly didn't dispel any of the myth making, and even helped cultivate it. He was a lot like Bob Dylan that way: both built personas to promote themselv...

Is Today Cancellation Day for Detroit?

As Drew McManus reminds us , the Detroit Symphony management said on Wednesday that they would cancel the season if an agreement wasn't reached in two days. Will they really follow through? Were they bluffing? Does anybody care?

Darth Vader Still Scares Me Completely

There's nothing funny about Darth Vade r. Nothing. He's the embodiment of evil. Have these people even seen Star Wars? I'll have nightmares tonight.

Orchestra Death Watch: Detroit Symphony Negotiations Grind On

Two million dollars is what the Detroit Symphony and the union are fighting ove r. Management wants to keep that money for community outreach; the musicians want it for their salaries. Once again, the musicians whine for the short gain instead of going for long-term engagement with the city and the people that, ostensibly, will help sustain their organization. The orchestra says that they'll need to cancel the rest of the season in "two days" if they don't reach a settlement. I thought that ship had already sailed. It seems as if the strike has been going on forever . 

One Football Song?

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"Running Back" is as close as my friend David Parks got to a football song. A good bit of rock history, but not a football song.

Football Makes for Lousy Music

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I heard  Kate Jacobs's "Rey Ordonez " yesterday. It's one in a long line of baseball odes , and there are lots of songs about hockey --but why doesn't anyone write about football? Maybe it's because football isn't fun. Baseball and hockey have crazy fun-loving characters and lovable losers (I'm looking at you, Maple Leafs). Football has psychotics that (literally) commit horrible violent crimes; winning's not the main thing, it's the only thing. So, this Super Bowl Sunday ( don't sue me NFL) , check in with  Brian Wilson  (who's making a case to be the next  Bill Lee , apparently), find out why Gerry Cheevers's mask was so creepy, and listen to some music: And if I'm wrong about football, let me know.

Why I Wasn't Blogging for Two Weeks

Last weekend, I gave a paper at the local American Musicological Society chapter's winter meeting . Here's the paper, which is on Rochberg's Second String Quartet.

A Free Concert on Sunday

Christ and St. Stephen's Church on West 69th Street in Manhattan is a great place to hear music, and this weekend you check it out for free: the North/South Chamber Orchestra is performing some new music there on Sunday at 3 PM. You'll hear music by Sean Hickey . He's a friend of mine, but also a composer worth knowing.

Sunday with the Kids: Baby Got Bach

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Baby got Bach is back. Orli Shaham and her gang will be down in Greenwich Village at Le Poisson Rouge on Sunday --doors open at 11 AM. It looks like a good time for all, and a nice balance of hands-on participation and top-notch performance. Make sure you hang around for the finale: Steve Mackey's Sneaky March .