NEWS ROUNDUP


Industry News

Republicans Move to Kill NPR, PBS

April 3, 2025 | Taylor Grant, Musical America
Republicans in the House of Representatives are trying to advance legislation—the No Partisan Radio and Partisan Broadcasting Services Act (H.R. 2443)—that would effectively end federal funding for both National Public Radio and the … » Read
 

Industry News

The 21st-century Accompanist: Equal Partner

April 3, 2025 | Anthony Brown, Musical America
Before the middle decades of the 20 th century, no role in the world of classical music was less appreciated than that of piano accompanist. “Trained to be unnoticeable… [the accompanist was] schooled in self-effacement,” … » Read
 

People in the News

New Artist of the Month: Soprano Abigail Raiford

April 1, 2025 | Fred Cohn, Musical America
Abigail Raiford failed to nab top honors at the  Met Opera’s Laffont Competition Finals Concert on March 16, but when she stepped on the storied stage to accept her runner-up prize (there were four, out of the nine finalists), the … » Read
 

People in the News

A Musical Transformation and a Special Bond, 20 Years Later

April 2, 2025 | Taylor Grant, Musical America
An encounter near the Beethoven statue in Los Angeles’s Pershing Square 20 years ago changed the lives of both Steve Lopez and Nathaniel Ayers. Lopez was a columnist for the Los Angeles Times , and Ayers a Cleveland-born musical prodigy and … » Read
 

Industry News

Fired KenCen VP Describes Toxicity Under Trump

April 2, 2025 | Taylor Grant, Musical America
Until March 25, Marc Bamuthi Joseph, a curator and performance artist, was vice president and artistic director of social impact at The Kennedy Center, a position he had held for seven years. Then, in a matter of less than a day, he and five … » Read
 

Industry News

Surprise! A Steady Income Enables Artists to Thrive

April 2, 2025 | Sarah Shay, Musical America
Between July 2022 and July 2024, the Artist Employment Program (AEP)—an initiative launched and administered by Creatives Rebuild New York (CRNY) and funded with $125 million from the Mellon, Ford, and Niarchos foundations—sought to … » Read
 

People in the News

New Development Chief at Music Academy

April 2, 2025 | Edward Egerton, Musical America
Nicholas Walls is the new chief advancement officer at the Music Academy of the West; he succeeds Jodi Barnard, who retired in January. Walls, who started March 31, most recently served as senior director of philanthropy at the Seattle Symphony, … » Read
 

Reviews

London Phil Polishes the Lesser-Known of the Familiar

April 1, 2025 | Clive Paget, Musical America
LONDON—The three items on the bill at the London Philharmonic’s March 26 concert—by Kaija Saariaho, Carl Nielsen, and Prokofiev—share no great connection, although two of the three composers were Scandinavian, as is the … » Read
 

Reviews

Israel Phil's Stateside Tour Wraps Up with Protests and Tchaikovsky

April 1, 2025 | Taylor Grant, Musical America
The Israeli Philharmonic is sure to attract protesters, and its March 26 performance at the Segerstrom Concert Hall in Costa Mesa, CA., the last stop on its U.S. tour, proved no exception. But unlike an earlier concert in San Francisco, where … » Read
 

Reviews

The Sax in Three Guises Gets Local Premiere

April 1, 2025 | George Loomis, Musical America
Two venerable musicians long associated with the New York Philharmonic joined forces last week. Leonard Slatkin, who first appeared as a guest conductor more than 50 years ago (in 1974), returned in that capacity on March 26 for the first of … » Read
 
 

»More News

 
 

RENT A PHOTO

Search Musical America's archive of photos from 1900-1992.

 

»BROWSE & SEARCH ARCHIVE