The Right-Wing Folk Machine?

In North America, folk music has traditionally been the purview of the political left, the stripped-down performance of protest representing a quaint, if frequently ineffective, method of protest against the powerful. But in Israel, it is the far right which has embraced folk music, using it to protest Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s decision to pull Jewish “settlers” out of the Gaza Strip. As in most folk music, subtlety is cast aside, and the message is clear: this land is our land.

Scholars On A Mission

Eight decades ago, a book collector from Cleveland gathered an impressive array of medieval manuscripts, then divided them into 40 boxes and dispersed them to locations around the world, in an effort to increase the accessibility of such rare antiquities. But over the years, scholars had lost track of the boxes, and the collector’s vision was never truly realized. Now, two Canadian scholars are hard at work tracking down the boxes (they’ve found 33 already,) with the aim of digitally reconstructing the original manuscripts so that they can be shared with the entire world.

AGO 70% To Goal

“The Art Gallery of Ontario announced yesterday it has raised more than 70 percent of the CAN$254-million it says it needs to bring superstar architect Frank Gehry’s renovation to fruition by spring, 2008, and not coincidentally pay off ‘a little bit’ of the debt from the AGO’s last $60-million expansion, in 1993… The gallery has earmarked CAN$30-million of the anticipated CAN$254-million for the administration and maintenance of its collections, with another $5-million going into a fund to acquire Canadian and international contemporary art.”

Quite A Comeback

AGO’s fundraising triumph represents a considerable turnaround from the museum’s misfortunes of a year ago. For a while, it seemed that AGO couldn’t stumble out of a crisis without bumping headlong into another one. But Toronto’s cultural elite rallied behind the beleaguered museum, and this week’s announcement that AGO is within striking distance of having money in the bank sufficient to stabilize itself and pay for a glamorous new building goes a long way towards rehabilitating its bruised image.

Previn At 75

Andre Previn is now pulling back from the 90-plus concerts he performs a year to concentrate on composing. Why is the self-confessed “conductor who composes” now putting composition at the heart of his musical life? “I am so peripatetic,” he says. “I run around so much that I finally reasoned that composing is the one musical endeavour which you can do anywhere, anytime. I like writing, but it’s only in the past 10 years that I’ve written a lot. Now, happily, I’ve got a whole file full of commissions.”

The DaVinci Trailer

How big a pop cultural phenomenon is The DaVinci Code? Well, here’s one indication: filming on the movie version of Dan Brown’s runaway bestseller hasn’t even begun (and Westminster Abbey has declined requests for parts of the film to be shot there,) and yet a preview for it is running in front of George Lucas’s latest Star Wars installment. The book has generated considerable controversy amongst Catholics, but the quibbling doesn’t appear to have hurt the book’s popularity, and Hollywood is salivating over the prospect of carving out a chunk of the franchise.

Big Thrills, Little Exposure

Authors of suspense novels don’t get a whole heck of a lot of respect from the rest of the publishing world, and even getting their books displayed can be a challenge. But the second-class status may be changing, at least if the authors themselves have anything to say about it. “Thriller writers across the country have formed a national organization to burnish their image, honor excellence in suspense writing, and create new ways for readers to discover their books.”

Bringing A Bit Of Retailing Wisdom To The Arts

How is it that American art museums are flourishing, even as orchestras, theatres, and so many other arts institutions find themselves desperate for cash and running annual deficits? The answer may be as simple as an increased focus on the customer. “Art museums have learned the lessons of successful retailers in that they allow people to visit at all times of day, including evenings and weekends, not at a prearranged time. And a visitor can go at his or her own pace in a museum, looking, reading, thinking and enjoying. Plus, a concert, dance, performance or film is often included in the price of admission.”

BookExpo America, La Scena

“The consensus on the annual three-day publishing and booksellers’ convention, which alternates cities like a traveling circus, was that there was no consensus—no standout theme, Bill Clinton memoir or looming election. The whole affair was a blur of cheap wine, mini empanadas and free books, punctuated by the odd wannabe author cruising the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center with a toilet seat around his neck. The fact that the expo took place in New York, as opposed to Chicago or Los Angeles, only lent a certain world-weariness to the proceedings.”

Shelley Letters Sell For £45,600

Letters written by poet Percy Bysshe Shelley have sold at auction for £45,600. “The letters, which provide an insight into Shelley’s views on atheism, were destined for a car boot sale until the owner contacted the auction house. They were found in a trunk at a house in south-west London alongside four written by Shelley’s best friend Thomas Jefferson Hogg.”