The New Immigration, The New Culture

The culture of immigrants who passed through Ellis Island in the 20th Century has reverberated through the city’s popular culture. But the culture of a more recent waves of immigrants is only slowly seeping into the city. “Nearly 1 million immigrants have settled in New York since 1990, and today 36% of city residents (or 2.9 million) are foreign-born, a figure rivaling the previous high of 41% reached in 1910, according to U.S. census statistics. The borough of Queens, where once-deteriorating neighborhoods have been revitalized by a flood of newcomers, is now thought to be the nation’s most ethnically diverse county.”

The Sad Seedy Side Of Legendary

Legendary performances take on an aura of their own. “The trouble with legends is that they simultaneously attract and repel. There’s a serious downside. The world of legend worship is patrolled and inhabited by very sad people, almost all of them men. This is not a world that suffers fools gladly. There is something embarrassing about being part of it.”

US In Iraq – Loud Music As Weapon

Once again, US troops are using loud American rock music as a weapon against its foes. Last week the Americans blared music into Fallujah, hoping to set militants nerves on edge. “The loud music recalls the Army’s use of rap and rock to help flush out Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega after the December 1989 invasion on his country, and the FBI’s blaring progressively more irritating tunes in an attempt to end a standoff with armed members of the Branch Davidian cult in Waco, Texas in 1993.”

Today’s Music: Give Me That Old Time Religion

Christian music is big business now. “Sales of praise and worship albums have doubled since 2000, to about 12 million in 2003. While music sales over all slumped last year, including Christian music in general, worship music was up 5 percent. A series of CD’s marketed on television by Time-Life, “Songs 4 Worship,” has drawn a million subscribers and sold about 8 million CD’s since 2000.”

This Just In: The Current Thinking On Virgil

Dr. Robert Fagles has spent painstaking years translating Virgil’s Aeneid – “nearly as long as it took Virgil to write the epic poem.” And why, when there are already translations available? “Every age needs classics translated into the idiom of the moment. It gives the works new vitality, new meaning. It offers to the living a connection with those who went before, the accumulated wisdom of the past, a protection from a dangerous provincialism.”

Universal Raises CD Prices (Cutting Prices Didn’t Help)

Universal is abandoning its lower retail pricing plan, and increasing its suggested retail prices. “Universal’s competitors didn’t follow suit with wholesale price cuts. Some record label executives privately dismissed the price-cut plan as a promotional ploy aimed at boosting short-term sales numbers. Moreover, some retailers complained that the new system unfairly squeezed their profit margins.”

California Arts Council Director Resigns

Barry Hessenius has resigned as director of the California Arts Council. “During his tenure, Hessenius has overseen Arts Council budgets that reached a high of $30.7 million in 2000-01 and a low of $1 million for the current fiscal year, a drop of more than 97 percent in funding for the arts by the state. The money had been awarded as grants to more than 4,000 of the state’s arts endeavors, large and small, rural and inner-city – everything from artists in residence in schools to major orchestras.”

Is Schwarz Done In Liverpool?

Why did musicians of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic vote to not renew music director Gerard Schwarz’s contract? “If it’s because the Liverpool orchestra rejects him aesthetically, that might be a problem. If it’s because the orchestra resents some changes he’s making, that’s different. They might resent him for firing somebody’s brother. They might think that just because the tuba player is 80 years old, that’s no reason for him to go away.”