Tony Night Lacking Brits

“When Broadway hands out the 59th annual Tony Awards tonight at Radio City Music Hall, one contingent will be conspicuously absent: the British. Well, OK, that’s not entirely true.” There are British actors nominated in several categories, but all are considered long shots to win. In fact, Broadway has taken a distinctly American turn this year, and Brits are finding themselves shut out of the top roles for the first time in decades.

Politics Before Progress

London has finally embarked on a redesign of its beleagured South Bank Arts Centre. But no sooner had progress started to be made than an ugly battle between the Centre’s chief executive and the local government overseers spilled over into the press. Now, it seems as if everyone in the city is choosing up sides, and the controversy is badly overshadowing what should be a collaborative project.

Rembrandt Soup For The Gullible Soul

These days, it seems as if self-help books can turn anything on Earth into an inspirational get-up-and-go speech. “And now the popularization of artists and museums has yielded something else to feel ambivalent about: the first art-focused self-help book, ‘How Rembrandt Reveals Your Beautiful, Imperfect Self: Life Lessons From the Master.’ [Roger] Housden’s book is largely focused on Rembrandt’s renowned self-portraits, in which he charted the changes in his visage from cocky youthful promise to destitute old age. The gist is that despite Rembrandt’s all-too-human flaws, he at least had the courage to repeatedly face himself in the mirror – and we can learn from this example.” Hey! You in the back! Quit rolling your eyes! Housden is actually (we think) serious.

Bringing Back Horowitz, Digitally

“Old recordings of great performers are often marred by scratches and surface noise, or by sound badly filtered through primitive microphones. [But a new technology] is offering the same music with the immediacy of live performance and the acoustical advantages of a contemporary piano.” The innovator is Dr. John Q. Walker, and he breathed new life into the Disklavier, which has so far mainly been used to allow live performances to be simultaneously reproduced far away on an automated piano. Walker’s latest project is the digitization of recordings by old masters of the instrument, which can then be newly “performed” by the specially equipped pianos.

The L.A. You Don’t Know

Mention ‘culture’ and ‘Los Angeles’ in the same sentence, and you’ll likely hear a few snickers. After all, this is Hollywood’s town, a city of car-crazy transplants with no real interest in the high arts, right? Wrong, says Donald Rosenberg. The myth of a cultureless L.A. probably wasn’t ever true, and it certainly isn’t true now. America’s second-largest city is buzzing with culture, and is fast becoming one of the country’s centers of artistic innovation.

Choosing Music Over Tact

Striking orchestras put conductors in a difficult position – the guy on the podium has a lot more in common with the musicians than the managers, but as the face of the organization, he can’t really afford to take sides. Traditionally, conductors stay out of labor disputes altogether, lest they burn bridges on either side. So when the striking musicians in Montreal placed a call to conductor William Henry Curry and asked him to lead them in a free concert to build community support for their cause, Curry had to think long and hard. But he accepted, even though he knew full well that his participation would likely cost him any chance of an official guest conducting invitation in the future.

It’s Nice That You Like Us, But Honestly, We Don’t Care That Much

Minneapolis/St. Paul is America’s 15th-largest metropolitan area, with virtually none of the national buzz and star-driven glitz that hews to cities like Chicago, Boston, and San Francisco. So how is it that the Twin Cities theatre scene has been racking up so many national awards and accolades in recent years? Part of the answer can be found in Minnesota’s nearly unmatched public and private support for the arts, but there’s more to it than that. In fact, much of the Twin Cities’ theatrical success may lie in the local scene’s almost total lack of interest in sucking up to New York.

The Computer Recommends…

Music retailers are turning to sophisticated computer analysis of music to try to recommend music to consumers. “The listeners classify hundreds of characteristics about each song, including beat, melody, lyrics, tonal palette and dynamics, then plug the data into a music recommendation engine — software designed to find songs that share similar traits.”

Are Book Browsers Disappearing?

There are more books available than ever before. And people are still buying. But will booklovers still browse book stores? “People are spending less time in the back of the store, looking through the philosophy section, and more time at the tables for `recommended books’ in front. They’re looking for someone to narrow their choices.”