Top Posts From AJBlogs 01.13.15

New research from the NEA
AJBlog: For What It’s Worth Published 2015-01-13

Nobody’s victims
(David Jays on “victim art” 20 years after Arlene Croce’s notorious essay)
AJBlog: Performance Monkey Published 2015-01-13

Walters’ Founding Story: Good, Except …
AJBlog: Real Clear Arts Published 2015-01-13

A triumph and a question
(Greg Sandow on the National Symphony’s big club gig)
AJBlog: Sandow Published 2015-01-13

Joe Pass’s Birthday
AJBlog: RiffTides Published 2015-01-13

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Shift: A Reimagined Spring For Music Festival Going To The Kennedy Center

“Called “Shift: A Festival of American orchestras,” and initially scheduled for a three-year run starting in the spring of 2017, the festival is a continuation, or reimagining, of the Spring for Music festival that ran in New York from 2010 to 2014, which brought orchestras large and small to Carnegie Hall with innovative, unusual programs.”

Filmmaker Francesco Rosi, 92

“The French critic Michel Ciment once counted Mr. Rosi among ‘the three last giants of Italian cinema,’ the others being Federico Fellini and Michelangelo Antonio. His films won top prizes at the Cannes, Venice and Berlin film festivals. Yet he never acquired the kind of international fame many of his peers knew.”

Is There Really An Anti-Writer Trend In British Theatre?

“There has been a shift of opinion against playwriting, in favour of collective methods of theatre. The very activity of playwriting has been attacked as individualistic, undemocratic and even immoral,” playwright David Edgar recently declared. Lyn Gardner begs to differ: “But even if what Edgar is saying is just a provocation, I’m really not sure that talking about an ‘anti-writer trend’ is either true or helpful.”