NY Spent $2.4 Billion On Arts Buildings In 90s

A new study charts spending on arts projects in New York in the booming 90s. “The combined spending in public and private money for capital construction for these groups hit $2.4 billion during the 10-year period in question, $1.8 billion alone being spent from 1997 to 2002. The spending generated $2.3 billion in economic activity, including $512 million in wages, 2,255 full-time jobs, and $36 million in personal income, sales, and corporate revenues flowing back into the city coffers.”

Point-And-Click Phones

A new generation of cell phones allows users to point and click their phones on hyperlinks in the real world. In museums “visitors could download high-quality audio and visual content about exhibits. Tourists could retrieve sightseeing information as they walk through a city. Users could even leave contact details like their e-mail addresses to receive updates on events, exhibitions or special offers.”

Pakistani Profs Fear English Classics May Be Banned

Professors at Pakistan’s leading universities fear that a rising tide of fundamentalism may strip English classic books from university programs. “A review of books studied in the English courses at Punjab University in Lahore singled out several texts, including Alexander Pope’s The Rape of the Lock, Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises, and Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels as containing offensive sexual connotations which were deemed ‘vulgar’.”

UK To Release Orwell’s Famous “List”

Fifty-four years ago George Orwel drew up a famous list of “cryto-Communists. Now the British government “has agreed to strip the final shred of secrecy from the leftwing author George and put it in the public domain. The Foreign Office is expected shortly to disgorge its copy of the document – until now held back as too sensitive. The public record office in Kew hopes to make the file openly available this summer.”

Finland – A Musical Utopia?

Finland sounds like a musical Utopia. And certainly Finnish musicians are making their mark internationally. So what nurtures such a positive musical environment? The country has “30 state-funded orchestras in the country, with as much as 90% of their income coming from the public purse. This extraordinary provision is for a total population of five million, less than that of London.”

Reinventing Opera For The 21st Century

London’s Almeida Theatre is embarking on the Genesis Project, commissioning new operas with the hope of reinventing the form for the 21st Century. “Genesis is trying to kick opera into the 21st century and give it a wider appeal to people like director Jean-Frédéric Messier, founder of the Montreal theatre company Momentum, and a man who is more likely to be found listening to Frank Zappa than Puccini. ‘Maybe opera does have a future if it can become a free open space where people can try anything’.”

What’s The Point Of Public Performance In An Age Of Recording?

Charles Rosen explains: “For the modern sensibility, the public performance is the final realisation of the work of music. In spite of the rich tradition of private and semiprivate music making in the centuries before our own, it is with the presentation in public that the performance of a work comes completely into its own, attains its full existence. We must rephrase the question “for whom does one play in public?”: the odd aesthetic objectivity, real or mythical, demands the form “for what does one play?” One plays for the music.”

Download Nation: We Boost Music Sales

A new survey reports that music downloaders actually buy more music than non-downloaders… “A total of 91 per cent of file-sharers download individual tracks, but more than two-thirds go on to buy the album, with even the heaviest downloaders saying they like to own real CDs. Only half of people who download music illegally from the internet believe they are doing something morally wrong. Almost half of the people who responded to the survey were “heavy downloaders” who obtained more than 100 tracks. However, surprisingly, 34 per cent of them said they were buying more music than ever before.”

Need To Get Around A Pesky Law? God Can Help.

Willy Pritts owns nearly 150 acres of open land in Pennsylvania, and thought he’d like to start holding concerts there. But his property isn’t zoned for such events, so local officials told him he’d have to scrap his plans. But Pritts is a resourceful fellow. He turned right around and incorporated as the Church of Universal Love and Music, which is – surprise! – “committed to spiritual growth through music.” County officials are not amused, nor are some of Pritts’s neighbors, who claim that the church’s “services” can be heard for miles around.