With Apple’s iTunes service an unqualified success in the lucrative music-downloading business, the company is setting its sights on a massive expansion of the library of music available digitally. Consumers are coming to expect that iTunes will be able to come up with the music they want to hear, even if it’s obscure or out of print, and the company’s team of song-hunters are determined to convince record companies to open their vaults and license more songs for digital release.
Category: music
Jazz As Institution (Lincoln Center)
“Jazz at Lincoln Center’s first season in its $128 million new home in the Time Warner Center at Columbus Circle will be a dialogue between the music and where it will be played. It’s a program — starting in the fall and to be announced today — that has been carefully thought out from the moment the organization began to conceive the hall’s physical space six years ago.”
A Home For Jazz
Jazz at Lincoln Center is “the world’s first performance center built for jazz, and the hall represents a milestone for jazz as an American art form. Construction is scheduled to be completed in July, and opening night, after a summer of private “tuning” concerts and adjustments, is set for Oct. 18. The project commits $128 million and prime real estate to recognize the lasting importance of music that was born in the streets.”
Degrading Experience – CD’s Rotting
Some consumers are finding that older CD’s in their collection are degrading, suffering from “CD rot,” a gradual deterioration of the data-carrying layer. It’s not known for sure how common the blight is, but it’s just one of a number of reasons that optical discs, including DVDs, may be a lot less long-lived than first thought. ‘We were all told that CDs were well-nigh indestructible when they were introduced in the mid-’80s. Companies used that in part to justify the higher price of CDs as well.”
Dohnanyi’s Cleveland Deficit
Conductor Christophe von Dohnanyi has a busy international schedule. But curiously, his schedule conspiculously does not include Cleveland, where he was the orchestra’s music director for 18 years. “Oddly, the Dohnanyi situation is a chilling case of Cleveland deja vu. For reasons sometimes clear and often not, the Cleveland Orchestra has a terrible record of bringing former music directors back to town.”
Last-Minute At The Met
“You can spend a decade singing minor roles in residence at a major opera house. And another 10 years in the hinterlands, perfecting major roles with minor opera companies. And by the time your ducks are lined up, you’re lucky to have a few years of good singing left, since opera stars, like professional athletes, have careers circumscribed by age and time. Too much too soon can kill a young voice. But too little too late can waste a singer’s prime.” So when a singer gets an opportunity to step in on short notice to sing at the Met…
Attack Of The Alien Atonality
Why is it, all these many years after atonality was introduced into music, that it still seems to shock listeners? And what is it about tonality that makes it seem familiar and easy to like?
Disney’s Unconventional Organ
Disney Hall is an unconventional concert hall. So the organ designed for the hall should be unconventional too. Its builders “had to adjust the size, sound and volume of each of its 6,134 pipes to suit the acoustics of the four-tiered, 2,265-seat hall. They had to engineer a way to make huge display pipes in bizarre shapes, anchor them securely into the rest of the structure, and yet allow them to sound normally. And since earthquake faults run beneath downtown Los Angeles, they had to make the organ quakeproof.”
Student Composers – Looking For Heroes
“Composers grow up with the idea that music is a game of heroes. In history books, they read that their forebears dazzled kings, electrified crowds, forged nations. Sooner or later, they come up against the disappointing realization that modern American culture has no space for a composer hero. That disappointment easily metastasizes into profound resentment, which no amount of success can dislodge. Indeed, the most famous composers are often the unhappiest.”
Low-Cost London Opera Experiment To Close
London’s new Savoy Opera, born only a month ago, and dedicated to presenting opera with affordable tickets, has decided to close. “We just haven’t sold enough seats, and it’s impossible under those circumstances for us to continue. But the experiment is not by any means over. We intend to review the situation. We are looking at why we were not selling enough and whether there is any way forward.”
