My latest book review is up at the Los Angeles Times.
'Apollo's Fire: A Day on Earth in Nature and Imagination' by Michael Sims - Los Angeles Times
Friday, September 21, 2007
Self-Promotion
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Plus Ca Change
"Italy's cultural system is on the brink of collapse. Opera in Italy is a museum with dusty exhibits. But it used to be the country with the greatest composers, artists and singers! I hardly perform there anymore."--Cecilia Bartoli, in an interview with the German newspaper Der Tagesspiegel, Sept. 14, 2007.
"Italy, my dear friend, is more enchanting from a distance than close at hand. The theaters have lost much of their former splendor. The art of music, the art of song, no longer flourish as they once did, and the future does not look promising for Italian singers. The works of the masters are utterly exhausted, and one sees no young talent emerging to replace them."--Adolphe Nourrit, in a letter to the bass Gustave Euzet, January, 1839 (quoted in The Great Tenor Tragedy by Henry Pleasants).
In Today's Feuilletons - signandsight
Posted by Jesse at 10:34 AM
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Self-Promotion
Posted by Jesse at 2:43 PM
Labels: Best American Science Writing
The New Power Behind the Baton
The London Philharmonic (not to be confused with the better London Symphony, which, my sources tell me, is somewhat at sea under Gergiev) has a new music director, the 35-year-old Vladimir Jurowski. New Yorkers will get a chance to hear him when he conducts Hansel und Gretel at the Met this season. The article is interesting, but leaves out an important part of the story. Jurowski, like Alan Gilbert and Franz Welser-Most, is represented by IMG Artists, the ascendant power in conductors' management now that CAMI is losing its influence.
Thanks to the Internet, just about every classical performer can be linked to his or her management--always a good way to follow why casting decisions get made.
Young, gifted and Russian - Times Online
Sunday, September 16, 2007
On Clive James
Adam Bresnick is a legendary English teacher at New York's Collegiate School (my alma mater, although he started teaching after I had been graduated). His take on Clive James in the Times Literary Supplement is perceptive and keen--and worth a read.
Unforgetting with Clive James - TLS Highlights - Times Online
Posted by Jesse at 3:17 PM
Labels: Clive James
In Memoriam: Maria Callas
If you're having trouble watching this--my blog format cuts off the right edge--here's the link to the clip on Veoh: http://www.veoh.com/videos/v970514aqeJWQHS
Online Videos by Veoh.com