Dali Museum To Get New Home

“Salvador Dali never set foot in St. Petersburg, Fla., where the dominant art form is the watercolor beachscape. But in a strange twist worthy of one of the Spanish Surrealist master’s paintings, St. Petersburg will soon be home to a $30-million museum to house the world’s most comprehensive collection of Dali’s work… Groundbreaking is set for early next year. The new facility will open in 2010.”

Pavarotti Surgery Successful

Luciano Pavarotti is resting comfortably following successful cancer surgery in New York. “The 70-year-old singer was preparing to leave New York last week to resume his farewell world concert tour in Britain when doctors discovered a malignant pancreatic mass.” Doctors were reportedly able to remove the entire mass during the procedure, but pancreatic cancer has one of the highest eventual fatality rates among cancers. Pavarotti plans to resume touring in 2007.

You Can’t Win Without Words

Times are tough for Republicans, no doubt about it, but somehow, the current public dissatisfaction with the Bush Administration has yet to translate into anything approaching widespread support for the opposition Democrats. Why are the Dems so totally incapable of seizing the moment? One linguist suggests that while the GOP may be on the outs politically, they’re still the reigning champions when it comes to effective use of language. “The right has been incredibly successful in capturing the English political vocabulary. In a way, it’s a tribute to their ability to spin compelling narratives.”

Free eBook Downloads Are A Hit

The publishing industry appears to be the latest corner of the arts world to discover that consumers will flock to almost anything given away for free. “That seems to be the lesson of the first few days of the World eBook Fair, a one-month experiment in free downloadable books produced by Illinois-based Project Gutenberg. The fair began Tuesday, and already more than 1.5 million books have been downloaded.”

Less Levine, But No Less Committed

“James Levine does look thinner, healthier, and the best part of all, there’s no change in his magical right baton-waving hand. And so he proved it last night at Tanglewood, conducting a little eerily for this listener the same program that he was leading when he took a header and crashed into rotator cuff surgery on March 1. That would be the Schoenberg first chamber symphony, and the glorious Beethoven ninth. He’s certainly lost a bunch of pounds, but James Levine has lost none of his humane gravitas.”

Hitting All The High Notes

It was a good year for Opera Theatre of St. Louis, a small but important company that each summer draws opera aficionados from across the country to the Midwest for a month-long festival. A $400,000 challenge grant, “for which the company had to raise $7.5 million and attract 1,000 new donors by June 30, was not only met but surpassed in both dollars and donors… The company made a major push to bring in young people to its performances,” and continued its efforts to assist talented young singers in making the transition to the professional world.

Littler: Great Orchestras Don’t Take The Summer Off

The Toronto Symphony has come a long way since nearly succumbing to bankruptcy a few years back. But William Littler says that the TSO still lacks one of the crucial amenities of a major North American orchestra: “Unlike most orchestras of its class, Toronto’s still lacks the summer season that would keep its profile before the public and its players more extensively employed.”

Backing Away From The Abyss

Cooler heads may be prevailing at the Seattle Symphony, where news recently leaked out of an internal survey conducted by the musicians to express their dissatisfaction with the leadership of longtime music director Gerard Schwarz. The musicians now insist (contrary to some earlier reports) that the survey results were never intended to become public, and that they intend to settle their differences with the symphony’s board and management in-house. For his part, Schwarz is taking the high road, barely acknowledging the controversy and declaring that his relationship with the orchestra is “all about the music.”