posted by James Reel
OK, so I'm a bad blogger and I didn't alert you to all the American music we played on July 4. But here's an alert: July 7 is the 150th anniversary of the birth of Gustav Mahler. For the occasion, we're going to broadcast his first, seventh and eighth symphonies at various points in the day, and Bill McGlaughlin is still looking into the Mahler symphonies on Exploring Music at 7 p.m. every weeknight. You can find full listings for July 7 here.
Classical Music,
July 6th 2010 at 10:16 —
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posted by James Reel
They talked me into writing a feature for the latest Tucson Weekly. I agreed, but just this once.
quodlibet,
July 1st 2010 at 6:32 —
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posted by James Reel
Blogger and critic Lisa Hirsch wonders why on earth performers would care to read reviews:
What if you get a bad or equivocal review? I'm convinced that performers don't benefit from reading these. I've been on stage enough times myself, as a chorister or flutist, to know perfectly well that most performers have a very good idea of how well they did on a given night. I am always more aware than anyone in the audience of the errors I've made or that the chorus or orchestra has made or where somebody really missed a cue badly (including conductors who forget to throw a cue the chorus is expecting). Is a performer going to learn much from reading a critic who says the tenor blew the high note or the bass has a wobble or something else like that? I think not.
A couple of people have said things to me along the lines of, well, a performer might learn something and change from reading reviews. I don't buy that.
Reviews are not pedagogical. A review is one person's perception of what happened in a particular theater or concert hall at one performance. It's a snapshot, and that's it. It has real value as a bit of history.
She's largely right, but I do know of a couple of instances when a performer has taken my reviews to heart. It helps that I try not to be mean-spirited, which lessens the entertainment value but is more constructive in the long run. An actor once told me, "Most of us respect you, except for the people who hate your guts." I'm satisfied with that balance.
I'm reminded of the famous English actor--I can't remember which actor--who said that it's perfectly acceptable never to read negative reviews ... as long as you don't read positive reviews, either.
quodlibet,
June 23rd 2010 at 7:45 —
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posted by James Reel
This Saturday, June 19, is an annual holiday that doesn't get a whole lot of press: Juneteenth, African American Emancipation Day, first celebrated in Galveston, Texas in 1865 and now a worldwide event. In celebration, KUAT-FM will have works by black composers scattered through the day's schedule--such American figures as William Grant Still and Duke Ellington (a suite from The River, starting at 10 a.m.), and, because it's now an international event, the Englishman Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, who was once so prominent that he was called the "African Mahler." His music sounds nothing like Mahler's, though, as you'll discover if you tune in for his Clarinet Quintet about 9:30 and then stick around for Mahler's Symphony No. 9 beginning a bit more than an hour later.
Classical Music,
June 18th 2010 at 8:58 —
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posted by James Reel
This just in from our Web experts: "The Classical Music Archive now lists all available metadata as long as the song has already aired." That means you can now find the composer, title, label and catalog number of every CD we've played in the recent past. Go here, which seems to give you only a list of our syndicated concert programs (Chicago Symphony and such), but if you click on an individual date, you will be taken to complete music listings for that day.
radio-life,
June 14th 2010 at 6:08 —
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posted by James Reel
While I was vacationing in Romania (about which more later, once I catch up with everything that didn't get done while I was away), retired University of Arizona composition professor Robert Muczynski passed away. He wrote music that I not only admired, but enjoyed, and it circulated easily around this country and across the Atlantic. Bob was always miffed that he didn't get the local attention he thought he deserved, but at least his works have become increasingly easy to hear via CD. My Fanfare colleague Walter Simmons, a longtime Muczynski advocate, wrote this fine tribute.
Classical Music,
June 9th 2010 at 7:43 —
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