Baltimore Cutting Music Lessons For Kids

Fifteen children, dressed to the nines, gathered in the rotunda of Baltimore City Hall yesterday to play their violins and cellos for the politicians who are closing their music school. The Baltimore Talent Education Center provides after-school music training for 180 children from across the city. “The school system, facing a financial crisis, has reassigned the three full-time teachers who run the weekly lessons, saying their talents will be better used in music classrooms in schools. The teachers’ redeployment is the result of an immense school system staff reduction; layoff notices were sent to more than 700 employees last month.”

Barenboim Threatens To Quit Berlin Opera Company

Berlin Staatsoper director Daniel Barenboim has threatened to quit the company if a planned city reorganization of Berlin’s three opera companies goes through. Barenboim told the German daily Die Zeit that “the federation would jeopardise his artistic integrity as it had the final say in determining the Staatsoper’s programme. ‘Without changing the titles, the three directors have been reduced to vice-directors, because suddenly there is someone above them who dictates what they can and cannot do. If I can’t perform something that is musically important to me, I will not continue this job.”

Jazz Critic Giddins Leaves Voice

Village Voice jazz critic Gary Giddins is leaving the Voice after 30 years. “I don’t like writing short, and it’s time. In jazz, time is all. I’m as besotted with jazz as ever, and expect to write about it till last call, albeit in other formats. Indeed, much in the way being hanged is said to focus the mind, this finale has made me conscious of the columns I never wrote.” Maybe in a blog on ArtJournal?

Canadian Recording Industry To Sue Uploaders

The Canadian recording industry says it is going to begin suing uploaders of music. “Any litigation would be a course of action we are really being forced into. It’s a process that’s a last resort, to try and address the huge problems, because the industry’s lost 30 per cent of its retail base since 1999. The losses [in Canada] are in excess of $425-million.”

Of Rings, Wagner and Tolkien

Lord of the Rings certainly has a Wagnerian feel, writes Alex Ross. And not just because rings are at the center of the two epics. “Tolkien refused to admit that his ring had anything to do with Wagner’s. ‘Both rings were round, and there the resemblance ceased,’ he said. But he certainly knew his Wagner, and made an informal study of ‘Die Walküre’ not long before writing the novels. The idea of the omnipotent ring must have come directly from Wagner; nothing quite like it appears in the old sagas.”

The New Divas

“This fall has seen a remarkable outpouring of albums by female opera singers,” writes Charles Michener. “The majority of them, as it happens, are not sopranos but mezzo-sopranos; we’re living in an age when, curiously, many of the most interesting female voices belong not to the leading ladies who impersonate the tragic heroines around which most operatic plots creak, but to a powerful group of slightly lower-voiced women who rival, and frequently outstrip, the prima donnas for vocal charisma.”

The Land Where Music Is Banned

“A public ban on music has gradually taken effect in Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province, after a radical alliance of right-wing religious parties swept to power in local elections last year. Music and film stores have closed, musicians have been harassed and vigilantes routinely tear down posters and torch tapes, decrying them as un-Islamic.”

Carmen In Seville (For Real)

A production of Bizet’s “Carmen” is going to be staged on the streets of Seville, where the opera is set. “Thousands of spectators will be invited to follow the tale of doomed love as it is played out around city landmarks. Spanish film-maker Carlos Saura will direct only 10 performances as part of the city’s international music festival starting in September.”

NY Subway Musicians Go To Korea

New York subway musicians are a constan presence underground. One entrepreneur thought they would be a hit in the Seoul subway, which doesn’t have performers. So she rounded up some players and flew them to Korea. “They were featured on Korean talk shows and news shows, and their faces were all over the papers. And the buzz only increased as the days passed. On the day of their second performance, the musicians arrived at GangNam station to find several hundred people sitting quietly on the floor, some with their own mats, waiting for the music to start. By the time the trip ended two weeks later, the five musicians were the toast of the town, featured in just about every newspaper, magazine and TV show of note.”

Union Saves Music Program

Oakland Technical High School was going to lose its music program until America’s largest union came up with the money to save it. “The 1.6 million-member Service Employees International Union, which represents school employees and has strong ties in Oakland, donated more than $91,300 to the school at a ceremony last Wednesday in honor of International Human Rights Day. The money pays for the music director position and keeps several music programs afloat for one year, such as the pep squad band, piano classes and a choral program. The donation also sets up a student chorus called Voices of Justice.”