A Share In A Great Violin

Violinist Robert McDuffie wanted a great violin but couldn’t afford the cost himself. “So he incorporated, setting up 1737 del Gesu Partners, L.P., and convinced 16 friends and acquaintances (including himself) to invest in the instrument. The return on equity? Two private concerts a year, a share in any profits when McDuffie sells the violin in 2024 — and the pleasure of seeing and hearing a master play a masterpiece.”

The Day The Great Memorials Died

“For a long time their architects and artists, their stone-carvers and bronze-founders got better and better. For a long time their elevated style got nobler and nobler. Then, suddenly, it died. It died a poignant death — at the peak of its accomplishment, just when it got great. We know the date exactly. Memorial sculpture’s greatness left Washington forever on the 30th of May, Memorial Day, 1922.”

Broadway Directives

This season on Broadway illustrated the worth of good directors. “The battle between art and commerce on what we occasionally still call the Great White Way, continues as ever. But the happy surprise this year is that if you focus on the ample good work being done — and ignore the largely crass cacophony of the season’s musical fare, or the soulless star vehicles that will always be around — you might just be able to convince yourself that it’s a fair fight.”

The Complicated Robbins

“By all accounts Jerome Robbins was a complicated, sometimes joyful, sometimes tortured, often angry man, so it is no surprise that his reputation remains complex. At his best, at least, Robbins managed to bend classical dancers and steps to his purposes. However uneven his ballets may have been — and Balanchine had some clunkers too — there are those of us who remain deeply moved by Robbins’s greatest late ballets: those made after he had rejoined the City Ballet fold in 1969, the prodigal son, and was working in a largely classical idiom with Balanchine-trained dancers.”

Salsa’s Superstar Label Gets Back In The Game

“In its heyday, from the late 1960’s through the 70’s, Fania, like Motown, had a superstar-packed roster, a virtual monopoly on salsa’s A-list.” But the label fell on hard times. “Dozens of its most important recordings are out of print, and others were so shoddily transferred to CD — often directly from the original vinyl — as to be virtually unlistenable. Now, though, a Fania revival is stirring.”

The Architect And The Developer – Where’s The Public Interest?

“There was a time when government took an interest in big urban planning projects.” Increasingly, though, government plays only a marginal role. “Bigger social concerns, like housing for mixed incomes, equal access to parks and transit, and vibrant communal spaces, which were once the public’s purview, now increasingly fall to developers to address or not, as they see fit.”

Pakistan Bans Da Vinci Code

Pakistan has a small Christian community. But they’ve been protesting the movie. “Culture Minister Ghulam Jamal said the film was blasphemous. The screen adaptation of Dan Brown’s book revolves around the theory that Jesus married Mary Magdalene and their descendants survive today. A number of states in India have banned the film, although the federal censors have cleared it for release.”