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Tag Archives: radiohead
This week the panel is joined by #FoTS Ty Forquer. We discuss the Grammys (GO YORK BOWEN!), Oliveros’ Cage Award, the classical cred of Radiohead vs Reich, the salvation of classical music (ASIANS!) and Sam gets buyers remorse over Glass Symphony No. 9.
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If you enjoy the show, please subscribe on iTunes or your favorite podcast service using the links to the right.
- The Grammys are next week. GO YORK BOWEN!
- Pauline Oliveros gets a little Cagey (and rolls 50 large).
- Which came first – the Reich or the Radiohead? The panel proofreads The Telegraph.
- Can Asians save classical music?
- #FoTS Rob Deemer wants to let the inmates run the asylum.
- And some of the panel finds the Glass Symphony No. 9 to be only about 250% too long. Happy 75th maestro.
- Symphony no. 9 by Philip Glass, perf. Bruchner Orchester Linz – iTunes
The panel discusses the new Greenwood-Penderecki album, what you can’t do at arts venues, Kojiro Umezaki’s Cycles (what falls must rise), and more.
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If you enjoy the show, please subscribe on iTunes or your favorite podcast service using the links to the right.
- Alex Ross gives us a sample of some real winners to be presented at the annual meeting of the American Musicological Society.
- Colin Holter feels The Philadelphia Inquirer’s David Patrick Stearns doesn’t do justice to reviewing James Dillon’s new work.
- Ron Spigelman says arts venues should treat audiences like grownups (and poke a little fun while they’re at it!)
- Rob Deemer ponders how composers in rural areas make it to the big time.
- Jonny Greenwood and Krzysztof Penderecki team up to produce an album.
- Are we naturally inclined to like consonance? Research appearing in Physical Review Letters shows some interesting correlations.
- (Cycles) What Falls Must Rise by Kojiro Umezaki – Amazon MP3
– iTunes
Topics include the standardization of musical competence, visual art vs. music, ethnic diversity in young audiences, and pick of the week: Nico Muhly’s “Mothertongue”.
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If you enjoy the show, please subscribe on iTunes or your favorite podcast service using the links to the right.
This week’s panel:
This week’s topics include:
- Colin Eatock imagines the visual art world operating like the music world.
- Justin Davidson wants the new New York School to find their voice.
- Radiohead tries its hand at “tabloid” journalism.
- Hahn-Bin: Glam Bach?
- Have black and Latino youths lost interest in art?
- Carnegie Hall teams up with Juilliard and Toronto’s Royal Conservatory of Music to standardize musical competence.
Pick of the week:
- This week: Mothertongue (2008) by Nico Muhly – Amazon MP3
– iTunes
- Next week: Symphony No. 2 (1957) by Michael Tippett – Amazon MP3
– iTunes
Topics include the Detroit Symphony’s big cancellation, NEA budget cuts, controversial remarks from the NEA chair and Kennedy Center president, Michael Daugherty’s Grammy, Anna Nicole up in Lights, Radiohead’s new album, Spider-Man’s broadway spectacle, and more.
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If you enjoy the show, please subscribe on iTunes or your favorite podcast service using the links to the right.
This week’s panel:
This week’s topics include:
- Detroit Symphony musicians reject the DSO’s final final offer.
- Congress passes deep budget cuts to the National Endowment for the Arts.
- NEA Chairperson Rocco Landesman may not think that’s such a bad idea; he said there’s too much art already.
- The Kennedy Center’s Michael Kaiser thinks we just aren’t making art that’s any good.
- Michael Daugherty and the Nashville Symphony had a good night at last week’s Grammy Awards.
- Mark-Anthony Turnage’s opera Anna Nicole makes waves at the Royal Opera House in London.
- Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark is getting its share of reviews while still in previews on Broadway.
- Radiohead is trying yet another new distribution model with their new album The King of Limbs.
- Composer Helmut Lachenmann is honored for his body of work with a big, fat check.
Posted in podcast, SoundNotion
Tagged anna nicole, bono, Detroit Symphony, grammy, helmut lachenmann, king of limbs, mark-anthony turnage, michael daugherty, michael kaiser, nashville symphony, national endowment for the arts, radiohead, rocco landesman, saint louis symphony, spider-man, timothy rutherford-johnson, timothy walberg, turn off the dark
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