TIFF Gets A Lot Less Political

“Politics — national, not studio, that is — is in surprisingly short supply [at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival,] given the imminence of a United States election and the festival’s past record.” So what’s filling the void? A dose of good, old-fashioned Hollywood fun.

Raging Against The Party Machine (Both Of ‘Em)

Commentators often decry the seeming inability of today’s musicians to engage their fans in political protest, but don’t tell that to the organizers of this year’s DNC and RNC Conventions. “For two weeks straight, both in Denver and in Minneapolis, Rage Against the Machine, a rap-metal band formed in 1991 and known for its big noise and ferocious politics, formed an ad-hoc convention in opposition to both major parties.”

SPAC Attendance Plunges; PhilOrch Takes Biggest Hit

“Overall attendance and income for Saratoga Performing Arts Center’s classical programs fell 9 percent this year… Philadelphia Orchestra and Freihofer’s Jazz Festival both experienced 16 percent attendance declines, while New York City Ballet was down 6 percent and Saratoga Chamber Music Festival 2 percent. The orchestra suffered a 21-percent drop in revenues.”

Radio 2 Needed To Change

Lost in the debate over whether the new CBC Radio 2 (much less classical, more pop/rock) is any good is the larger question of whether there was anything wrong with the old Radio 2, which was nearly all classical. The news director at one of Canada’s main TV networks says that he likes classical music, too, up to a point, but the fact is that the all-classical Radio 2 was anachronistic and boring.