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Industry News

Mid-budget Orchestra Announces Big-budget Venue Plan

February 14, 2024 | Sarah Shay, Musical America
The Columbus (OH) Symphony Orchestra has announced ambitious plans for a $275 million concert venue. Located on a 6.7-acre site along the Scioto River in the city’s downtown, the new 205,000-sq.-ft. building will include a concert hall … » Read
 

Industry News

Prisoners in Milan Create Instruments from Shipwrecked Wood

February 14, 2024 | Colleen Barry, Associated Press
MILAN (AP) — The violins, violas, and cellos played by the Orchestra of the Sea in its debut performance at Milan’s famed Teatro alla Scala carry with them tales of desperation and redemption. The wood that was bent, chiseled, and … » Read
 

Industry News

Opera Philly's 2024-25 Season: 3 Operas, 1 (U.S.) Premiere, No O Festival

February 13, 2024 | Susan Elliott, Musical America
Opera Philadelphia’s 2024-25 season reflects the company’s greatly reduced circumstances, as first disclosed in August with a 20 percent budget cut to $11 million and with General Director David B. Devan’s consequent decision to … » Read
 

Industry News

Rhapsody in Blue Is Not "Cheesecake"

February 13, 2024 | Taylor Grant, Musical America
A recent opinion piece by pianist and composer Ethan Iverson argued that Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue , currently marking its centennial, is “corny and Caucasian,” a “cheesecake” that has “clogged the arteries … » Read
 

Industry News

RTVE Experiment Proves AI Can't Produce a Believable Symphonic Score

February 13, 2024 | Anthony Brown, Musical America
Among the concerns that accompany the growing sophistication of artificial intelligence is the possibility among composers (along with songwriters, performers, and artists of any stripe) that it might replace them. In late 2023, the Symphony … » Read
 

Industry News

Want Diversity in the Audience? Put It on Stage.

February 13, 2024 | Sarah Shay, Musical America
The pursuit of racial and gender equity in the classical music world has taken on special urgency in the past decade. Concert programs that feature compositions by women, Blacks, and people of color are now de rigueur for most ensembles, and … » Read
 

Industry News

Should Opera Be on the Endangered Species List?

February 12, 2024 | Taylor Grant, Musical America
Opera, the most expensive of the performing arts, has suffered mightily since the pandemic. The failure of audiences to return to pre-pandemic numbers has combined with a dramatic rise in production costs. In less than a year, English National … » Read
 

Industry News

Hot Shot BMG Exec Preps for a Huge Shift in Music Biz

February 8, 2024 | Taylor Grant, Musical America
Thomas Coesfeld took over as CEO of the Bertelsmann company last July and is already redefining the company’s strategic outlook. In short order he has: placed the exclusive distribution of BMG’s digital business in the hands of … » Read
 

Industry News

Carnegie Hall in 2024-25: Anchored in Tradition, Embracing Exploration

February 7, 2024 | Susan Elliott, Musical America
With its 2024-25 season, Carnegie Hall upholds its reputation for showcasing the best and the brightest of the international classical music scene, while paying homage to other genres and stretching the canon way beyond traditional European … » Read
 

Industry News

The Met Turns to 'Middle American Malaise' for Staging Ideas

February 6, 2024 | Taylor Grant, Musical America
While the Metropolitan Opera’s embrace of contemporary opera has captured the wide-eyed attention of the cultural press, far less consideration has been given to the “middle American malaise” that musicologist Micaela Baranello … » Read
 
 

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