Muti Quits La Scala

Riccardo Muti has resigned as musical director of Milan’s La Scala opera house, following months of bitter recriminations and behind-the-scenes power struggles. The announcement comes weeks after the musicians and staff of La Scala called publicly for the 63-year-old conductor to be ousted. Muti had been the face of Italy’s most famous opera house since 1986.

Domingo’s Opera Harvest

Placido Domingo has made his mark not only as a singer but as a developer of opera companies. In Washington and Los Angeles he has taken companies to new heights. “While other American opera companies, such as San Francisco and the Met, have struggled through financial or political turmoil recently, Domingo’s houses have sailed along relatively unscathed. “I am very happy and proud of my companies,” he said. “We are just behind the Met and Chicago in terms of artistic quality and importance. That’s not to say that we don’t have problems. One of the biggest challenges is raising money. It’s not easy; especially since Sept. 11, things have become more difficult. But we have been working miracles in comparison [with other U.S. houses], and we are in good shape.”

Who’s Next?

With Riccardo Muti officially out, the race to find a successor is on at La Scala. But there aren’t many realistic candidates. “Muti’s successor will almost certainly have to be Italian and will be hard to find. The front-runners are probably Daniele Gatti, who is both music director of London’s Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and of Bologna’s Teatro Comunale, and Riccardo Chailly, who has recently left his post in Amsterdam to become music director in Leipzig. He has not yet arrived in Germany, however, which might make him more easily available… Another name being mentioned as a successor is Antonio Pappano, music director of Covent Garden.” And then there is the contingent that actually wants to convince Muti’s predecessor, Claudio Abbado, to retake the reins.

Whither The Maestro?

“The crisis in Milan, which has been front-page news around Italy and become the talk of the classical music world, is rooted not only in the politicized, sometimes anarchic atmosphere of Italian opera houses but also in the complex personality of Mr. Muti… The question of what happens next for this celebrated maestro has both immediate and long-range implications not just in Europe but in America, too.” The New York Philharmonic, which publicly courted the maestro for its open music director position several years ago, may do so again when Loren Maazel steps down. And with the situation in Milan so volatile, what conductor of stature will be willing to step into Muti’s shoes?

No Foghorn Required, Presumably

This weekend, on the Allegheny River in Pittsburgh, “artist Michael Pestel performed improvisational tunes while seated at a baby grand piano, floating on a section of a dock going down the back channel of the [river]. The performance art, which lasted about an hour, was videotaped… for showing during an exhibition that will open Friday at Chatham College, where Pestel is an assocate professor.” The event was inspired by composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, who once wrote of dreaming such a scene. Was it particularly groundbreaking? A window to a new breed of performance and/or photographic art? No, not really. But you’ve gotta see this picture.

Alexander Brott, 90

“Canadian conductor, composer and violinist Alexander Brott has died. He was 90. With his late wife and cellist Lotte, Brott was the founder and music director of the McGill Chamber Orchestra, which is now in its 65th year. He also conducted the Kingston, Ont., symphony, started a series of pop concerts in Montreal and set up a program to train young musicians.”

A Plan To Pump £100 Million Into UK’s Regional Museums

A plan to spend £100 million on museums across the UK should make a major impact on regional museums say officials. “The money from the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA) – under the Renaissance banner – is intended to transform regional museums. he government created hubs in each of the nine English regions, consisting of a leading museum and up to three partner museums. The plan is that they would work together to provide leadership in museum practice and improve standards in the museums sector.”

A Post-Classical Vision

Classical music might be over. But now we’ve got post-classical. And it ain’t a bad time to be a composer. Joseph Horowitz: “Suddenly we’re at a moment when composers are personally prominent in our music life. A) We have important composers who reach a very large audience, and again I’ll just talk for the moment about the most obvious three guys, Reich, Glass, and Adams. B) They’re performers. That’s enormously important. They’re not Ivory Tower figures.”

Graphic Noveldom Hath Arrived

Graphic novels – comic books – are a big and growing market. “Big sales and increasing interest from movie studios in recent years – to wit, Sin City, a movie opening today, based on a graphic novel by Frank Miller – has helped transform these book-length comics from the butt of the joke to the belle of the ball.”