NEWS ROUNDUP
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Reviews | Special Reports
Reviews | Special Reports
Contests & Awards
Application Deadline Nears for $500,000 Accelerator Awards
The Lewis Prize for Music is now accepting applications for Accelerator Awards for Creative Youth Development (CYD). The program provides multi-year awards of $500,000 each to music organizations that enhance youth access to learning, creating, … »
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People in the News
Birgit Nilsson Prize Goes to a Humanitarian Who Plays the Cello
Yo-Yo Ma has been announced as the winner of the triennial Birgit Nilsson Prize, which brings with it $1 million and an elaborate concert and presentation on October 18 by his Majesty King Carl XVI Gustaf at the Stockholm Concert Hall. Nilsson … »
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Reviews
MTT, Mahler Five, and the LSO: Standing O Says It All
LONDON--“Life is precious,” wrote Michael Tilson Thomas back on March 2. He was referring to his ongoing treatment for Glioblastoma Multiforme, a form of aggressive brain cancer. The conductor underwent an operation to remove what was … »
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People in the News
Ivo van Hove to Take Over Ruhr Triennale
Isabel Pfeiffer-Poensgen, Minister for Culture for North Rhine-Westphalia, has announced that beginning November 1, 2023, Ivo van Hove will become artistic director of the Ruhr Triennale for a three-year term. Van Hove will succeed the current … »
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People in the News
SPCO Taps New Artistic Partners
The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra (SPCO) has named two artistic partners—the South African cellist Abel Selaocoe and German violist Tabea Zimmermann—as of the 2022-23 season. Zimmermann, widely considered to be the world’s … »
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Industry News
Curtis Enlarges Its Composition Faculty by Three
The Curtis Institute of Music has added to its adjunct composition faculty for the 2022-23 academic year, joining the current Nick DiBerardino, director of composition studies, and Richard Danielpour. Newcomers include Steven Mackey and Jonathan … »
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Reviews
Hamlet: It's All in the Orchestra
If the sense of ambiguity that pervades Shakespeare’s Hamlet is what makes it so compelling a drama, it is also what makes it so challenging to an interpreter, be it a teller, a listener, a director, or a composer. Many of the last group … »
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People in the News
Teresa Berganza Dies at 89
Teresa Berganza, the Spanish mezzo-soprano renowned over her 40-year career for her distinctive legato and skill with language, died on May 13 in Madrid. She was 89. Born in Madrid in 1933, Berganza began her career as a 22-year-old in the era of … »
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People in the News
Manhattan School Creates New Division under New World Symphony VP
On July 1 J. T. Kane will be joining the Manhattan School of Music (MSM) as dean of the newly created Instrumental Studies and Orchestral Performance Division. Kane is currently VP for musician advancement and dean of orchestra at the New World … »
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Industry News
Full Exit: Bolshoi Expat Dancers
Rio de Janeiro (AFP) – The day Russia invaded Ukraine, Brazilian dancer David Motta, then a leading soloist at the renowned Bolshoi ballet, knew he had to leave the country where he had lived half his life. It was an "obvious" decision -- … »
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