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Topic: NEWS performers
WILLIAM Boughton, founder and principal conductor of the English Symphony Orchestra, has been appointed as principal conductor of the prestigious New Haven Symphony Orchestra in the USA. Boughton beat off over 70 applicants for the coveted job. The orchestra boasts a concert hall with a capacity of 3,000. Boughton and his family are moving during July from their home in Wycombe, having left Malvern after over 25 years at the helm of the ESO.
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  • New Haven Symphony Orchestra


  • Topic: NEWS Industry
    Those hours practicing piano scales or singing with a choral group weren't for nothing because people with a background in music tend to have a higher education and earn more, according to a new survey. The poll by Harris Interactive, an independent research company, showed that 88 percent of people with a post-graduate education were involved in music while in school, and 83 percent of people earning $150,000 or more had a music education.
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  • NOVEMBER 15
    Now Playing: ...for 300 years...
    Topic: CLASSICALmanac.com
    1807 First Performance of Beethoven's Symphony No. 4, in Vienna.
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  • Magdalena Kozena: Czech mate
    Topic: NEW CDs
    Magdalena Kozena has a mesmerising vocal range, lives with Simon Rattle, and is about to debut in London. Michael Church meets the mezzo with all the right moves.
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  • SHOP Magdalena Kozena

  • Pianist JOHN ARPIN dies...
    Now Playing: ...accompanist to Canadian contralto Maureen Forrester
    Topic: MILESTONESJun-Dec07

    Canadian pianist, Arpin, known as the "Chopin of Ragtime" by jazz great Eubie Blake. Arpin died of cancer 8 NOV 2007 in Toronto. He was 70. Born in Port McNicoll, Ont., on Dec. 3, 1936, Arpin graduated from the Royal Conservatory of Music and then studied music at the University of Toronto. Arpin was music director and accompanist to Canadian contralto Maureen Forrester for many years and recorded many albums with her.

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  • NOVEMBER 14
    Topic: CLASSICALmanac.com
    1942 Birth of Russian cellist Natalia GUTMAN in Kazan.
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  • 70 years ago
    Topic: CLASSICALmanac.com
    13 NOVEMBER 1937 First broadcast by the NBC Symphony Orchestra. Pierre Monteux conducting. Toscanini's first broadcast with the NBC Symphony was on Christmas Day, 1937.
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  • Topic: DVDs
    A splendid DVD from Deutsche Grammophon, Rafael Kubelík: A Portrait, reminds us that multiple tyrannies can govern a conductor’s life. Kubelík (1914 –1996) was a mightily gifted Bohemian-born conductor, scion of a legendary musical family (his father was the superstar violinist Jan Kubelík). Rafael Kubelík was music director of the Brno Opera when the Nazis shut the company down in 1941. A year later they executed the Opera’s administrative director, Václav Ji?íkovský (1891-1942), who had smuggled Jews out of Occupied Prague. Small wonder that Kubelík states in a 1970’s documentary (which is reprinted along with brilliant performances of Beethoven, Mozart, and Bruckner on the new DVD), “A conductor should be a guide, not a dictator. I could never stomach dictatorships.” When he was named wartime conductor of the Czech Philharmonic, he declined to perform Wagner, and would not give German notables the Nazi salute as required, nearly causing him to be arrested. A stunning interpreter of Mozart, Beethoven, Smetana, and Dvo?ák, Kubelík helped establish the Prague Spring Festival in 1946, but finally was driven from his homeland by the 1948 Communist coup.
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  • NOVEMBER 14
    Topic: CLASSICALmanac.com
    Aaron Copland (November 14, 1900 – December 2, 1990) was an American composer of concert and film music, as well as an accomplished pianist. Instrumental in forging a distinctly American style of composition, he was widely known as “the dean of American composers.” Copland was also a composer of film music, as well as an accomplished pianist. Instrumental in forging a distinctly American style of composition, he was widely known as “the dean of American composers.” Copland’s music achieved a difficult balance between modern music and American folk styles, and the open, slowly changing harmonies of many of his works are said to evoke the vast American landscape. He incorporated percussive orchestration, changing meter, polyrhythms, polychords and tone rows. Aside from composing, Copland taught, presented music-related lectures, wrote books and articles, and served as a conductor.
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  • NOVEMBER 9
    Topic: CLASSICALmanac.com
    1907 Birth of American composer Burrill PHILLIPS in Omaha, NE. d-22 JUN 1988.
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