ODE TO SANTA FE

After 44 years John Crosby is stepping down as head of the remarkable Santa Fe Opera. “His retirement this month comes close upon several more publicized recent or upcoming retirements – Peter Hemmings from the Los Angeles Opera, Lotfi Mansouri from the San Francisco – but it may be the more significant milestone.” – Washington Post

OPEN BOOKS

In response to criticism that no one is actually buying e-books, electronic publishers released sales figures – modest, yet encouraging. “Given that printed books have been around for 600 years, and e-books have barely registered on the consumer radar yet, I think we’re doing OK.” – Wired

A NOVEL IDEA

How worried does the audio-book business (a $2 billion-a-year industry) need to be about the recent proliferation of downloadable audio books on Napster-like sites? “The question really is whether there is a demand for audio books in the MP3 format. If there is, publishing would be well advised to figure out a legal – and money-making – way to make audio books available online. Readers might be willing to pay for the convenience of easy downloading if such a site were made available to them.” – Inside.com

THE HARDEST WORKING DEAD GUY IN SHOW BUSINESS

It’s been 23 years since Elvis died. But “during the past year, Elvis could be found in more movies than other hardest working men in show business such as Michael Caine, Gene Hackman and the Bridges brothers. The period of mid-1996 to mid-1997 – the first year of my unscientific survey –  remains the champ. During those 12 months, Elvis “appeared” in 26 movies – only seven fewer than the number in which he actually starred.” – Chicago Sun-Times

IN SEARCH OF BOHEMIA

“It has become fashionable these days to emphasize, even to celebrate, the assimilation of bohemian ideals to capitalist realities. The ‘bourgeois bohemian’ is becoming a stock figure in social criticism, or what passes for it. Trendy boutiques and lame attempts at politically correct purchasing have become the stuff of neo-conservative satire. The implicit message of such gloating is always the same: bohemia has disappeared into up-market fashion. And one would be hard pressed to deny that this new pop-sociological cliche has a basis in reality.” – The New Republic 08/14/00

EDINBURGH – DOES SIZE MATTER?

“We are repeatedly told that it is the biggest in the world, the largest arts festival of any kind, an artistically overstuffed August when, for three weeks, Edinburgh becomes the mother of all festivals – Official, Fringe, Film, Book, TV and now Club. But for too long, the Fringe has been inordinately concerned with size. Like an adolescent boy – and, for that matter, most males – it is obsessed with being the largest. But who’s counting? And does it matter?” – New Statesman 08/14/00