HARD-LIVING VIOLINIST

“Death is a recurring theme in a Ivry Gitlis interview because, well, other people just keep bringing up the subject. ‘Maestro rages against dying of the light’ screamed one review headline after Gitlis made his Australian debut at the 1998 Huntington Festival. Across the globe, music writers never tire of surmising whether the astonishing performance they’ve just witnessed might very well be the violinist’s last.” – Sydney Morning Herald

A SURE HIT

“‘The Full Monty’, the hearty singing adaptation of the popular English film about a motley male troupe of amateur strippers, opened last night in a blaze of pure mass appeal. The show calculatedly pushes as many buttons as an elevator operator, but it mercifully doesn’t hammer at them.” – New York Times

BLAME IT ON PO-MO?

Post-Modernism has got a bad name. “Mind you, most of them are never quite sure what postmodernism might be, but they know that it’s evil. Indeed, all of the contemporary world’s ills can be sheeted home to its pernicious influence.” And yet, ultimately, civilization will continue. – Sydney Morning Herald 10/27/00

  • FINALLY, A PRACTICAL DEFINITION OF POST-MODERNISM: According to John Barth: “Postmodernism consists somehow of being able to tie your necktie in a perfect full-Windsor knot while telling somebody what the stages are in tying a necktie – and at the same time discoursing on the history of men’s neckwear from the court of Louis XIV to the present and still not screwing up the knot.” – Chicago Tribune 10/27/00

THE ANTI-TURNERISTS

There are those who think that the best thing about the Turner Prize is that it inevitably irritates a lot of people. “This year, the Turner Prize’s promotional budget is being helped along by the Stuckists arts group, who are calling for a return to the values of modernism and an acknowledgment that painting is the only true expressive art form.” – London Evening Standard

A FESTIVAL SURVEY OF 20th CENTURY DANCE

“Inside and in front of Royce Hall, all the bottom-line strategies that once sent plenty of dance audiences and critics fleeing into the night reign again, newly revived and still as provocative as ever. Minimalism. Structuralism. Endless Repetition. Everyday Movement. Task-Oriented Choreography, Dances Anyone Can Do. And you know what? The simple honesty of this work looks awfully appealing compared to the desperate narcissism, salesmanship, emotional grandstanding and empty virtuosity of much Big Deal contemporary dance these days.” – Los Angeles Times

SLATKIN ON COPLAND

Leonard Slatkin explains why Aaron Copland is such a big deal in America. “When we think of the composers who have made their impact on the world scene, only a few names from America come to mind: Charles Ives, George Gershwin, Samuel Barber, Leonard Bernstein and at the top of the list, Copland.” – The Guardian