August 30, 2010

This week's links to NAJP members' work:

MJ Andersen on Picasso and Degas (The Providence Journal)
Laura Collins-Hughes on Amanda Palmer and her drama teacher (The Boston Globe)
Thomas Conner on the American Idols Live tour (Chicago Sun-Times)
Thomas Conner on Poi Dog Pondering (Chicago Sun-Times)
Steve Dollar on Eric Rohmer et al (The Wall Street Journal)
Michael Feingold reviews "Wife to James Whelan" (The Village Voice)
Christopher Hawthorne on the Broad Collection museum design (Los Angeles Times)
Matthew Gurewitsch profiles opera patron Peter Moores (The New York Times)
Matthew Gurewitsch queries the Paris Opera's Philippe Jordan (Opera News)
John Horn on a film director's unexpected intermission (Los Angeles Times)
John Horn on the European feel of "The American" (Los Angeles Times)
Hillel Italie on fall books (The Associated Press)
Dennis Lim on documentary-fiction hybrid films (The New York Times)
Dennis Lim on Josef von Sternberg's silent films (Los Angeles Times)
Mary Carole McCauley on the resignation of Center Stage's m.d. (The Baltimore Sun)
Manuel Mendoza on "Mao's Last Dancer" in real life (The Dallas Morning News)
Tom Moon on Cee Lo Green's viral hit, "Fuck You" (NPR)
Ann Powers reviews Katy Perry's "Teenage Dream" (Los Angeles Times)
Craig Seligman reviews "The Pain Chronicles" (Bloomberg News)
Douglas Wolk interviews dramatist and comics writer Tom Taylor (Techland)

Also:

Marcia B. Siegel's book, "Mirrors and Scrims: The Life and Afterlife of Ballet" (Wesleyan University Press), has won the American Society for Aesthetics' 2010 Selma Jeanne Cohen Memorial Prize.

August 30, 2010 12:00 AM | | Comments (0)
August 27, 2010

I've been working on a spreadsheet to track wage patterns in U.S. orchestras, mainly to find a context for the Detroit Symphony Orchestra's headline-grabbing news as its Sunday night contract deadline looms. The highest offer on the table, from the Detroit musicians themselves, puts their 2010-11 salary at $22,650 less than they made in 2009-10. That's a cut of 22 percent. The lowest offer, from management, drops salary by $34,450, a cut of 33 percent in this automobile manufacturing capital blasted by international economic trends.

The Detroit orchestra's downturn, combined with recent salary concessions at most orchestras in response to the Great Recession, might suggest the possibility of a historic decline for orchestras generally. 

But that's not all there is to see. While we wait to plug in numbers from Detroit, Houston, Fort Worth and other orchestras still negotiating, we might note other intriguing story lines:

1. There will be 10 orchestras in the $100,000-plus group this year, with the top six -- in Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, New York, Philadelphia and Boston -- well ahead of the pack. The Los Angeles Philharmonic, San Francisco Symphony Orchestra and New York Philharmonic are also pouring money into television, web subscriptions and HD broadcasts to strengthen their appeal to global audiences. (Click charts to enlarge.)

Top 10 as of Sept 7.png
2. The first among peers in the $100,000-plus group enjoy not only higher pay, but also higher growth rates, than the others in this category. Thus salary gaps within this echelon will continue to widen. Here's more on that: 
August 27, 2010 11:00 AM | | Comments (2)

I've been trying my best to resist, but the subject of Eli Broad is just too tempting. Earlier this week, the L.A. art collector and billionaire won final government approval to build a headquarters for his foundation and contemporary art collection across the street from Disney Hall and down the block from the Museum of Contemporary Art. He promptly announced that he had chosen the New York firm of Diller Scofidio + Renfro as architect of the planned 120,000-square-foot building.

There were no surprises in the announcement. It had basically been a done deal for weeks. So here are a few final thoughts on it:

1. The Broad Foundation collection is already based in a very nice building in Santa Monica. Although it is not open to the public, anyone with an interest in art who wants to view the collection can make an appointment to go see the work of blue-chip artists like Koons and Warhol in very nice and big galleries.

2. Open year-round to the public is the Broad Contemporary Art Museum at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in the mid-Wilshire area of the city, which opened in February 2008. There you can also see lots of work from Broad's collection, including sculptures by Richard Serra and more paintings by the likes of Koons and Warhol.

3. Although Broad said he had been considering Santa Monica and Beverly Hills as possible sites for the new location of the foundation, he was obviously using them as bargaining chips with the city of L.A. and just wasting the time of the officials from those other cities. For years, Broad has been championing the redevelopment of downtown L.A. Putting his building downtown would help that process along and get him premium attention, too. Officials from those other cities should have realized that Broad made much of his fortune in insurance, and that's all they ever were.

August 27, 2010 12:00 AM | | Comments (0)
August 26, 2010

Summer is the time when many musicians abandon their urban posts and kick up their heels at the more rural, or at any rate regional, music festivals. If you visit, say, Music@Menlo--the terrific, intimate festival that Wu Han and David Finckel have been running for a number of years in the small suburban town of Menlo Park, California--you are likely to see the same musicians you have spotted during the year at Alice Tully Hall (Han and Finckel's other venue, where they direct the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center), but this time wearing big smiles and recently acquired tans. Han, who can be quite warm and friendly in even her Lincoln Center introductions, positively bursts with enthusiasm when she introduces the Music@Menlo concerts, and you can see why after you've been to a few.

My favorite, among this year's very strong batch, was a concert called "Aftermath: 1945" that featured three pieces one wouldn't normally hear programmed together--mainly because each one is strong enough to knock your socks off, so they jostle each other mightily when put together.  Shostakovich's Eighth Quartet (dedicated to the memory of the "victims of war and fascism"), Benjamin Britten's stirring vocal piece titled The Holy Sonnets of John Donne, and Richard Strauss's strange, disturbing Metamorphosen are all masterpieces of their type, and it is a type that makes you want to quail or weep or make some other gesture of submission in the face of the powerful music.  In this case, the intimacy of the auditorium strengthened the effect, so that we in the first few rows were almost blown backward by the remarkable tenor voice of Matthew Plenk, who sang the Holy Sonnets with musical verve and perfect diction.  The other musicians (the pianist Ken Noda in the Britten, the Miró Quartet performing the Shostakovich, and an assortment of Lincoln Center regulars doing the Strauss) were equally good, and it was a stunning experience to hear one of these works after another in a single evening.  My only suggestion would have been to have two intermissions rather than one, so as to allow each piece the breathing room it needed--though it almost seems churlish of me to make any suggestion at all about what was otherwise a perfect evening.
August 26, 2010 2:10 PM | | Comments (0)
August 25, 2010

Had lunch today with Nancy Hanrahan, who for seven years in the '80s and '90s booked the New Jazz At the Public series at the Public Theater in Manhattan. She's now a tenured professor of sociology at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, who hopes to write a book about the decline of criticism in the internet age and was interviewing me to that end. A lot was said, including one point I'll get to that relates to Tom Moon's recent comment on his own less recent post--Plagens and me are in there too, and the back-and-forth seems of interest to me. But the main thing I want to report responds to Plagens's complaint that all we do at the NAJP is this blog. Hanrahan reads ARTicles regularly, but not as often as she would like. She thinks it's tremendously valuable, the only forum she's aware of for the problem that so interests her, and wanted to know why it's online-only--she'd read it more often if she could hold it in her hands. I replied with what seems to me the self-evident point that there was no way to make such a specialized publication economically viable, and nothing in her response persuades me in the slightest that I'm wrong. Nevertheless, especially coming from a sociologist I thought her climactic sentence was worth quoting in this era of hits and clicks: "Everything we need to know is quantified, but we don't really know anything." Think about that.

Among the things quantified, of course, are the deleterious effects of information bombardment on our mental functioning--well, often their mental functioning. Not that there was any quantification to speak of in "Digital Devices Deprive Brain of Needed Downtime," the chatty Matt Richtel piece Moon recommended in his comment today, which I'd forgotten I'd read this morning (on paper) by the time Moon brought it up. (Many others liked it more--it's at the top of the paper's most-emailed list! Does checking out most-emailed stories count as mental downtime? Or more distraction?) On the one hand, duh--I don't text, don't Twitter, don't have a Facebook page though maybe I should, and in general think information overload is a bane. On the other hand, that's exactly what someone of my age (and Moon's and Hanrahan's somewhat younger ages) is inevitably going to think, and I don't trust my command of this issue enough to make a big thing of it. It all sounds a little too familiar. Professors have been whining to me about how students don't read books for at least 30 years; I've been writing about information overload since my big New York Dolls essay in 1977, maybe longer. I wonder, just who are the sociologists and neurological researchers who are doing these studies? How old are they? What are their prejudices? I probably share those prejudices--a lot of them, anyway. But as I told Hanrahan when we discussed this point, I read too many articles 20-30 years ago about how you'd improve your infant's life by making sure s/he heard lots of Mozart before age one. What ever happened to that one?

Well, anyway, the big thing is: ARTicles--tremendously valuable. Post or comment now.
August 25, 2010 7:20 PM | | Comments (9)
August 23, 2010

MAO5.jpg
                                                                                                            Simon Cardwell/Samuel Goldwyn Films
Chengwu Guo, portraying the teen Li, in a big leap at the dance academy in
"Mao's Last Dancer."


We are in the midst of a good long run of movie releases in which dance is a central focus, and there are no signs of it letting up. 

These films abide by a popular formula, making them perfect movie fodder: handsome man or woman putting forth superhuman effort to become an artist; Faustian sacrifices for the rewards of fame and stardom; "exotic" lifestyle; et cetera. 

The Red Shoes, the Michael Powell-Emeric Pressburger classic from 1948, is the example par excellence, though it's certainly in a class by itself and of a loftier ilk. It boasts an astonishingly distinguished cast, including ballerina Moira Shearer, choreographer Léonide Massine, and danseur Robert Helpmann. 

Herbert Ross's The Turning Point (1977) had the advantage of introducing the U.S. to the newly arrived Russian sensation Mikhail Baryshnikov. There's been nearly a dance film a year since then, from hip-hop to ballroom. Many -- certainly more than I realized -- take on the world of classical ballet.

The latest one opened Friday in limited release: Mao's Last Dancer, Australian director Bruce Beresford's (Tender Mercies) adaptation of Li Cunxin's real-life story.

August 23, 2010 6:05 PM | | Comments (0)

This week's links to NAJP members' work:

Larry Blumenfeld on pianist-composer Guillermo Klein (The Wall Street Journal)
Larry Blumenfeld on pianist Matthew Shipp (The Wall Street Journal)
Robert Campbell on Design Research (The Boston Globe)
Laura Collins-Hughes reviews David Rabe's Vietnam War novel (Los Angeles Times)
Thomas Conner on "America's Got Talent" (Chicago Sun-Times)
Thomas Conner on Aerosmith (Chicago Sun-Times)
Francis Davis on Keith Jarrett and Cecil Taylor (The Village Voice)
Steve Dollar on "1-Bit Symphony" (The Wall Street Journal)
Steve Dollar on Tokyo Police Club (Time Out Chicago)
Michael Feingold reviews Paul Weitz's "Trust" (The Village Voice)
Matthew Gurewitsch on a Salzburg milestone for Riccardo Muti (Beyond Criticism)
Matthew Gurewitsch profiles young conductor David Afkham (Beyond Criticism)
Christopher Hawthorne on downtown L.A.'s renaissance (Los Angeles Times)
Ann Hornaday on a silent film about Louis Armstrong (The Washington Post)
Ann Hornaday on Washington stories in the movies (The Washington Post)
Hillel Italie interviews David Mamet (The Associated Press)
Lawrence B. Johnson on stalled talks at Detroit Symphony Orchestra (Detroit News)
Lawrence B. Johnson on what the two sides are proposing (Detroit News)
Julia M. Klein on Phyllis Lambert (The Wall Street Journal)
Laura Sydell on female musicians and social media (NPR)
Laura Sydell on science fiction as inspiration for engineers (NPR)
Jerome Weeks on animatronic dinosaurs (KERA, Dallas)
Douglas Wolk interviews Dark Horse Comics' "Star Wars" editors (Techland)

August 23, 2010 5:14 PM | | Comments (0)
August 22, 2010

A crazy thing happened as I read Peter's post entitled One Across The Bow from July 23. First I found myself nodding my head, which is unlikely enough given my general crankiness. Then I found my thinking going down darker and ever more dystopian avenues. Generally dour thoughts I've been avoiding, or ignoring. Peter, this missive pulled together a bunch of ideas and questions that have been rattling around in my fevered head for weeks. Not just about the broke-down state of this particular jalopy, but also the enterprise of arts journalism itself. That string of zeroes you mentioned has plenty to tell us. About how, leaving the problems of NAJP aside for a moment, there's likely not much of a market for these wares. Maybe, just maybe, it's Game Over and we're simply slow to face reality?

August 22, 2010 7:58 AM | | Comments (5)
August 19, 2010

I confess to a personal prejudice in favor of John Baldessari. He's the 79-year-old California artist who's the subject of the retrospective exhibition, ironically entitled (we'll get to that) "Pure Beauty," on view through September 12 at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. First, he's the author of one of the funniest impromptu lines I've ever heard in casual conversation. He and I had been invited to be jurors for the annual student art exhibition at Arizona State University in Tempe. After a long day's selecting--during which undergraduate volunteers would haul works of art into our view, pause so we could evaluate them, and then carry them, as it were offstage--John and I were walking to a party for participants given in one of those gigantic apartment complexes commonly adjacent to big universities. One of the student assistants joined us at an intersection's long red light. Not sure exactly who Baldessari was, she asked him, "Oh, Mr. Baldessari, do you live in the complex?"

"No, my dear," he said looking down from his six-foot-six height, "I live in the simple."

August 19, 2010 10:33 AM | | Comments (0)
August 17, 2010

The way comments work at ARTicles is us exalted bloggers get to do what we will with them--approve, view, edit, or report as spam. I don't know what the middle two mean (I suppose "edit" is so we can remove "offensive content," not my thing), so I approve or report as spam--many come in saying stuff like: "Terrific post! Have you thought about refinancing your mortgage? . . ." But when the first comment on my Arcade Fire post just said "I agree." and nothing else I didn't know what to do. Wasn't spam, but what was it? An ironic comment on my longwindedness, or on commenting itself. Too subtle for me. I was suspicious, so I just deleted it. I was chicken.

Then Marc Hogan wrote a graf arguing with my assessment of Win Butler's anti-hipsterism, and Ann Powers said something rich as usual, and I was too busy to weigh in but looked forward to a few more intelligent opinions--the comments here are easily the smartest I see anywhere. Instead in wades "Jerry" telling me to go fuck myself, only less elegantly. And then comes three comments (two by the same guy, my own personal star commenter Dean Jones) insulting Jerry, and a fourth taking a potshot at Jerry before going on to out the unnamed "horrible stupid" critic of my post and further describe his sins. So let me say a few things about Jerry.

First, Jerry didn't write spam and I never hesitated to publish his comment. He was responding in his own horrible stupid way. But then there's a strategic matter. My belief is that the best way to hurt horrible stupid people like Jerry is to act like they aren't there. They want to deposit their dog doo-doo on the pavement, don't get any on your shoe. They only want attention and are too horrible and stupid to understand your cutting riposte. Only then this morning I got a cutting riposte I actually thought effective, from someone pretending (I assume) to be Jerry's parole officer.

So here's another thing about ARTicles comments. Sometimes we approve a comment and it never shows up in the thread. That seems to be what happened. What's more, I approved it from my spam folder--yet another thing about ARTicles comments is that that's where they sometimes end up on my computer for some no doubt AOL-linked reason--and so now it's gone. Would said parole officer be so kind as to resend?

As for anti-hipsterism, well, what Douglas Wolk said at EMP is right--these days, the main thing we know about hipsters is that they're someone else. But I would like to say that I started ID'ing myself as an anti-bohemian bohemian nearly 40 years ago, and that I think this is a sane and honorable stance as long as the underlying cultural analysis is realistic, which Butler's is. "Die Hipser Die"--stupid T-shirt. "We used to wait," or "How you gonna lift it with your arms folded tight"--right on, brother.
August 17, 2010 11:32 AM | | Comments (4)
August 16, 2010

August 16, 2010 5:33 AM | | Comments (0)
August 14, 2010

Michael Phillips, movie critic for the Chicago Tribune and one of my favorite critics, has a thoughtful piece about the Donald Rosenberg case. Rosenberg is the longtime classical music critic at the Cleveland Plain Dealer who was taken off the Cleveland Orchestra beat last year after the paper's top editor decided that he'd said all he had to say (Rosenberg's version of the story, of course, was the point of his lawsuit). Last week, Rosenberg's case against the Plain Dealer went down in flames. There's been considerable chatter about it on Twitter under the hashtag #DonR. Phillips:

As the Cleveland situation asserted, no critic has a "right" to a compensated opinion. We serve at the pleasure of our employers. And yet we're only worth reading when we push our luck and ourselves, and remember that without a sense of freedom, coupled with a sense that we cannot squander it, we're just filler. As David Mamet said to a gathering of theater critics back in 1978: If you are not "striving to improve and to write informedly and morally and to a purpose, you are a hack and a plaything of your advertisers." 

The advertisers are fewer now. Times are not easy. But a critic must write as if he has everything and nothing to lose, just as a filmmaker or an artistic director or a music director should have no choice but to aim high and dig deeply and damn all the rest of it. Otherwise, it's steady as she goes and one more paycheck (if you're fortunate) gratefully received, and that simply is not good enough.

It's an interesting piece and a meditation on what it means to be a critic. 

Approached the wrong way criticism is an inherently arrogant and narcissistic pursuit, yet what I'm left with, increasingly, is how humbling it is. It's hard to get a review right for yourself, let alone for anyone reading it later. It's even harder to be an artist worth writing and reading about, because so much conspires against even an inspired artist's bravest efforts.

Check it out.
August 14, 2010 12:52 PM | | Comments (0)
August 11, 2010

Partly because of my new iPad, which allows me to download for free any of Project Gutenberg's out-of-copyright novels, I was re-reading Henry James's great early novel The Bostonians on my recent vacation.

I recommend re-reading James in any form, because once you know the plot, you can slow down enough to enjoy all the wonderful turns of phrase, and especially the jokes.  The Bostonians, in particular, is filled with sharp humor that at times made me laugh out loud -- as when an editor advised Basil Ransom, the sometime hero of the book, that his ideas were a few hundred years out of date and some magazine of the sixteenth century would no doubt have been glad to publish them.  I say "sometime" hero, because the other hero of this book, given equal standing with Basil, is the intense, anxious Olive Chancellor, staunch feminist and intimate friend of Verena Tarrant, the pretty red-headed girl whom Basil is trying to lure away into marriage.  The word "lesbian" does not surface in this novel -- even the idea, as sexual relationship, does not surface -- but the notion of a Boston marriage was common enough in James's time to lend that connotation to the book's title.

I finished the book a few days ago, but the characters are still with me:  not just Basil and Olive and the beautiful but slightly vacuous Verena, but also the wonderful Dr. Prance (the "lady doctor," perhaps the sharpest intelligence in the book, who is concerned with specifics and realities rather than the airy theories of feminism, and who slyly lets Basil know that she thinks Verena "rather thin"). My thoughts have lingered as well with the unscrupulous, man-chasing Mrs. Luna and her brat of a son, Newton, and with the kind-hearted old Bostonian, Miss Birdseye, who represents the classic New England reformer. I even treasure the loathsome Tarrants -- Verena's father, a "mesmeric healer," and her mother, the pathetic, social-climbing daughter of a well-known abolitionist -- for their near-Dickensian vividness and ludicrousness.  This is a novel in which no one is spared but in which everyone earns at least a grain of James's sympathy, and sometimes (as in Olive's and Basil's case) much more than that.
 
After its initial 1886 appearance, James never republished this book; even when he brought out his uniform New York Edition, he left it out, perhaps in part because the folks back home in Boston had such violent objections to it.  From the letters he wrote and received, it would seem that the objections centered mainly around the character of Miss Birdseye, who was taken as an unkind portrait of the well-regarded Miss Peabody. But there's lots more to object to than that, and many people who read it in 1886 probably hated it for exactly the reasons that make one love it today.  I would even recommend paying for a paper copy, an actual, old-fashioned, bound-in-covers book.  That way you can keep it on your real (as opposed to virtual) shelf when you have finished it, and be able to loan it out to friends, and have it handy for future re-readings that might take place decades hence, when -- even as digital files may have changed their format -- print will remain eternally legible.
August 11, 2010 5:26 AM | | Comments (1)
August 10, 2010

Just sent in a B&N Review piece on the new Arcade Fire album/tour, released August 3 and commenced August 4, and not for the first time when I'm coming in late--as more rock criticism should, albums being the most reusable of all artistic entities--began by looking back at their story and checking out the collegial consensus. Often this kind of prep work is just intellectual calisthenics, and that's what happened this time--I ended up researching and thinking about a lot of stuff that was obviated by the work, especially when I started concentrating on the lyrics, which I generally put off till I've absorbed the music. So I thought I'd share with you these three notes, which are unrelated except, obviously, that they all pertain to arts journalism.

1) Supposedly, the Arcade Fire's 2004 Funeral was the album Pitchfork made, the album that made Pitchfork, or both. In some limited sense, both. David Moore's rave, and 9.7 rating, certainly speeded up a bandwagon that was already rolling, and as Funeral  began its march toward gold-level 500,000 sales (which took till this year), the magazine's underground rep as a kingmaker--especially as of editor Ryan Schreiber's rave for the much more subcultural Canadian band Broken Social Scene a year before--was duly noted in the MSM. What I always wondered was the extent to which Schreiber had ordered up the review, as was widely but not therefore credibly rumored (backbiting rumor-mongering being even more rife in the online rockmag world than in the rest of journalism). One informant guessed but didn't claim to know for sure that Schreiber softened up the then 20-year-old college student Moore and then handed him the assignment on a band he wanted to make sure was very positively reviewed. So I got hold of Moore and obtained his version. Moore told me that there was some back-and-forth with Schreiber, but via IM rather than in person--he was a student at Ithaca College at the time. For sure it was clear that Moore would write a positive review, but he felt no pressure and got no instructions. Until, that is, it came to the rating. Moore wanted to give the record a perfect 10.0 (which he knows now was a little silly--"I was young, there was a lot I didn't know"). Pitchfork--Moore doesn't remember who--told him they didn't give 10s, so he suggested a 9.7 compromise. Which as a longtime grader I'd say is still a little silly. Within a year or two Moore had lost his passion for alt-rock--his crush on Funeral was based largely on its emotional avoidance of indie irony--and now writes a blog called Cureforbedbugs that's big into girlpop. He loves Ashlee Simpson. His ideas read better when you don't know the music in question. He makes his living running an enrichment program for lower-income elementary-school kids in Philly.
August 10, 2010 5:52 PM | | Comments (8)
August 9, 2010

When I first floated the fantasy of an arts publication, I didn't assume it would be an NAJP production, tho I have no problem with that and would happily avail myself of any advice/help NAJP members can provide. Egged on by Peter Plagens, the NAJP board discussed this idea at our last teleconference meeting. Members were sympathetic but dubious, and unwilling to invest much of their own limited time in a project with such a dim chance of realization. Me, too, what with book projects and other ventures on the horizon. It was decided I would send an e-mail to all members asking if anyone wanted to join a committee to further discuss the matter.

Bob Christgau and I also had dinner recently with Joe Levy, who has considerable magazine experience. He suggested some ideas and avenues toward people to approach for advice and money. His thinking was that it would best fly as a prestige print monthly or quarterly, however wide-ranging the arts covered. It could also have an online presence, of course.

Upon further reflection I have decided to post this in ARTicles instead of sending it out to the entire membership -- because it's easier and because the NAJP membership list is seriously out of date and no one has the time to update it. I, too, am doubtful such a venture could fly, without a munificent endowment provided by a single philanthropist, as opposed to a shifting consortium of foundations, each of which would have to be appeased.

So: If anyone reading this wants to get together via teleconference to discuss it further, fine (tho I won't be back from abroad until Aug. 22). I would be especially interested in anyone with an MBA or hands-on experience in the upper levels of magazine publishing, with practical ideas about funding, business models and such. If the membership is as hesitant as most of the board, I could pursue it on my own, on the model of Lapham's Quarterly or The Believer. Or I could let the whole idea die a graceful death. 
August 9, 2010 9:05 AM | | Comments (2)
August 9, 2010 12:00 AM | | Comments (0)
August 8, 2010

I know, it's too much to ask: Could we please, pretty please, have an "American Idol" judge who knows what he/she is hearing? Doesn't matter if said person is a celebrity or not -- just possesses a bit more of an aesthetic than the last two judges....

In the words of one potential candidate: "Dream On."

August 8, 2010 12:19 PM | | Comments (0)
August 2, 2010

August 2, 2010 12:00 AM | | Comments (0)
July 26, 2010

This week's links to NAJP members' work:

Michael Feingold reviews "A Disappearing Number" (The Village Voice)
Sasha Frere-Jones on Big Boi (The New Yorker)
Sasha Frere-Jones on Spiritualized (The New Yorker)
Matthew Gurewitsch on resurrecting Franz Schreker's operas (The New York Times)
Matthew Gurewitsch on the avatars of Madame Armfeldt (The New York Times)
John Horn interviews Olivia Munn (Los Angeles Times)
John Horn on "Super" at Comic-Con (Los Angeles Times)
Ann Hornaday reviews "Salt" and "Countdown to Zero" (The Washington Post)
Ann Hornaday reviews "Agora" (The Washington Post)
Marty Hughley on Sojourn Theatre's mobile play, "On the Table" (The Oregonian)
Julia M. Klein on a new Cleopatra exhibition (Obit Magazine)
Ann Powers reviews Rihanna in concert (Los Angeles Times)
Ann Powers reviews Sheryl Crow's
"100 Miles From Memphis" (Los Angeles Times)

And in print only:

Mark Rozzo on Pennsylvania Dutch Country traditions, revitalized (Bon Appétit)

Apologies for the late posting!

July 26, 2010 7:25 PM | | Comments (0)
July 23, 2010

What's the word in Neo-Esperanto for somebody who's a schmuck, ingrate, lightning rod, traitor, party-pooper, egoist, troublemaker, and whiner all rolled into one? Find it, somebody, and apply it to me because here goes:

Something, it seems to me, is seriously wrong with NAJP.

July 23, 2010 8:10 AM | | Comments (7)


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    the National Arts Journalism Program, an association of some 500 journalists in the United States. Our group blog is a place for arts and cultural journalists to share ideas and information, to celebrate what we do, and to make the case for its continuing value. ARTicles is edited by Laura Collins-Hughes. To contact her, click here.
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