Alex Ross's Blog, page 64

August 12, 2019

Korngold at Bard

Surround Sound. The New Yorker, Aug. 19, 2109.

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Published on August 12, 2019 08:22

July 19, 2019

A Trevor Bača moment


Ashley Walters performing Bača's Nähte at a WasteLAnd Music event, Nov. 16, 2018.  Walters will play the same piece live at Outhaus in LA on Aug. 1, as part of a three-day Underwolf Records festival (July 31 – Aug. 2). Many more videos from WasteLAnd's recent concerts are now online, including works of Liza Lim, Chaya Czernowin, Richard Barrett, Katherine Young, Nicholas Deyoe, and Andrew McIntosh. I especially recommend Klaus Lang's missa beati pauperes spiritu, which I was lucky to witness live; I am somewhere behind Michael Pisaro.

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Published on July 19, 2019 21:03

July 10, 2019

Bookshelf

9780472054268


Melissa Burrage, The Karl Muck Scandal: Classical Music and Xenophobia in World War I America (Boydell and Brewer)


Cate Haste, Passionate Spirit: The Life of Alma Mahler (Basic Books)


Shayne Carter, Dead People I Have Known (Victoria UP)


Mark Stryker, Jazz from Detroit (University of Michigan Press)


Katherine M. Kuenzli, Henry van de Velde: Designing Modernism (Yale UP)

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Published on July 10, 2019 10:59

July 2, 2019

The Karl Muck affair

Banner cartoon


For the New Yorker website, I've written a Cultural Comment on two recent books that describe the absurd and frightening Karl Muck hysteria of 1917-18. Above is a cartoon from the period. One rumor pegged Muck as Wagner's illegitimate son, prompting a poem from Lincoln Kirstein: "Karl Muck conducts the symphony; a steel svelte villain, he— / Ma says he's Wagner's bastard son ('Daddy, what's bostordy?')" Other eminent German- and Austrian-born musicians suffered consequences during the First World War, including Ernst Kunwald, who was interned; Frederick Stock, who temporarily stepped down from the Chicago Symphony; and Fritz Kreisler, who stopped performing for the duration of the war.

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Published on July 02, 2019 14:00

June 30, 2019

Miscellany

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"No musical administrator is more widely respected or well liked than Ara Guzelimian," I wrote on this blog in 2007, shortly after Ara left Carnegie Hall to become Dean of Juilliard. Ara recently announced that he would be stepping down from Juilliard after a thirteen-year term, and the song remains the same. During his tenure, Juilliard diversified and deepened its mission while retaining an exalted status among American conservatories. I look forward to seeing what institution will profit next from Ara's wisdom and warmth.... The keen critic and Bruckner authority Richard Lehnert has left Stereophile after thirty-four years of service as the magazine's copyeditor. He's written a delightful memoir of his adventures in editing.... The Louth Contemporary Music Society, whose leader Eamonn Quinn won the Belmont Prize last year, has an entrancing new CD out, KLANG, on which the Goeyvaerts String Trio plays Wolfgang von Schweinitz's Sounds on Schön Berg La Monte Young.... On August 10, Indexical will take over much of the Californian city of Santa Cruz, as Carmina Escobar leads a daylong event entitled Feast of Beams, Keepers of Light. Indexical is seeking musicians, dancers, artists, surfers, and bicyclists.... The NYC activist orchestra The Dream Unfinished ends its season on July 11 with a program devoted to climate change and its effect on communities of color.

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Published on June 30, 2019 17:47

June 24, 2019

Monk's ATLAS, Davis's Central Park Five

Earth Songs. The New Yorker, July 1, 2019.

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Published on June 24, 2019 09:05

June 23, 2019

Thought of the day

"When Wagner 'thinks,' he stumbles."


                                            — Nietzsche

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Published on June 23, 2019 17:57

June 17, 2019

Stockhausen's LICHT in Amsterdam

Infinity Opera. The New Yorker, June 24, 2019.

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Published on June 17, 2019 08:00

June 8, 2019

Gay life

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On the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of Stonewall, I've assembled some of my writing on gay topics, going back to the first piece I wrote for The New Yorker, in 1993. The photo is from my marriage to Jonathan in Toronto, June 2005.


Love on the March. Nov. 4, 2012.


Gay Berlin, Jan. 26, 2015.


Oscar Wilde, Aug. 9, 2011.


Willa Cather, Oct. 2, 2017.


Corigliano's First Symphony, May 30, 2019.


Gay opera, July 27, 2017.


Women, gays, and classical music. Oct. 3, 2013.


Beyond the gay-marriage victory, March 25, 2013.


Gay-rights victories, Nov. 7, 2012.


Thomas Mann, March 11, 1996.


In memoriam River Phoenix, Washington Post, Nov. 7, 1993.


On Wayne Koestenbaum's The Queen's Throat, April 12, 1993.

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Published on June 08, 2019 09:05

June 1, 2019

Corigliano's First Symphony

Revisiting a Symphonic AIDS Memorial, New Yorker website, May 30, 2019.

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Published on June 01, 2019 01:19

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