Category: Blog

  • Shostakovich and Cold War Anxieties in ‘Bridge of Spies’

    Shostakovich and Cold War Anxieties in ‘Bridge of Spies’

    Director Steven Spielberg is so closely associated with the epic scores of John Williams that it’s easy to overlook the moments in which he has used classical music in his films, from Bach in “Schindler’s List” to Schubert’s “Unfinished” Symphony in “Minority Report.”

  • Gorecki’s Fourth Symphony: Sequel to an Unlikely ‘Hit’

    Gorecki’s Fourth Symphony: Sequel to an Unlikely ‘Hit’

    Classical recordings today rarely sell a million copies, and when they do we assume the performers’ success involved a YouTube breakthrough or perhaps a reality-television appearance. 

  • Benjamin Millepied Moved Opera Ballet into Digital Space

    Benjamin Millepied Moved Opera Ballet into Digital Space

    With their distinct issues and personalities, the worlds of ballet and classical music rarely share the same news cycle. But last week’s surprise announcement that Benjamin Millepied is quitting as director of the Paris Opera Ballet will have repercussions beyond the world of dance.

  • Can Young, Charismatic Conductors Strike the Right Chord?

    Can Young, Charismatic Conductors Strike the Right Chord?

    The news on Thursday that the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra has hired Lithuanian conductor Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla, 29, as its next music director has generated has a degree of excitement not always seen in announcements of this sort.

  • 3 New Films About Florence Foster Jenkins: A Users’ Guide

    3 New Films About Florence Foster Jenkins: A Users’ Guide

    In an apparent fluke of timing, there are no fewer than three films currently in production or release about Florence Foster Jenkins, the socialite who became infamous in the 1920s and ’30s for her tone-deaf renditions of opera arias by Mozart, Verdi and other composers.

  • New Orchestras Focus on the ‘Now’ and ‘Nu’

    New Orchestras Focus on the ‘Now’ and ‘Nu’

    “The musicians you see here are not from central casting—they’re conservatory-trained,” Bard College president and conductor Leon Botstein assured audiences on Friday night as he introduced The Orchestra Now, Bard’s new graduate training ensemble.

  • New York Philharmonic Taps Jaap van Zweden as Music Director

    New York Philharmonic Taps Jaap van Zweden as Music Director

    The New York Philharmonic has found its successor to Alan Gilbert. The orchestra announced on Wednesday that its next music director will be Jaap van Zweden, a fastidious Dutch conductor who will lead the ensemble as it embarks on a multi-year hall renovation set to begin in 2019.

  • A Blizzard Prompts Cancellations and a Free Download

    A Blizzard Prompts Cancellations and a Free Download

    Broadway, Lincoln Center and Carnegie Hall all went dark this weekend as the historic snowstorm walloped the East Coast, leaving many arts groups scrambling to issue refunds or reschedule performances where possible. But one rock-and-roll veteran went the extra mile after his concert was cancelled.

  • Mahler’s Eighth Symphony: Unjustly Neglected?

    Mahler’s Eighth Symphony: Unjustly Neglected?

    There’s no other symphony like Gustav Mahler’s Eighth. The piece got its nickname, the “Symphony of a Thousand,” at its 1910 premiere in Munich, which featured 1,030 performers, including 858 singers, 171 instrumentalists and the composer himself on the podium. Although a thousand musicians aren’t normally used these days (300 to 500 is more typical), it’s still a demanding and expensive undertaking,…

  • Hollywood’s Diversity Debate Has Echoes in Classical Music

    Hollywood’s Diversity Debate Has Echoes in Classical Music

    The dearth of black actors among this year’s Oscar nominees has triggered what some observers are calling a full-fledged diversity crisis for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, even as the president of the organization has promised change. Lack of diversity in the arts isn’t just a concern for Hollywood, of course, and there…