Archive for April 1st, 2011

Just one cornetto

Friday, April 1st, 2011

by Keith Clarke

By the time this reaches the blogosphere I shall be swanning round Venice, gaping at art and canals and hoping not to encounter too many people playing Vivaldi at me. It’s my luck, one way or the other, to be out of the UK when the Arts Council makes its biggest funding announcement in history, but I’m not losing too much sleep over that. It’s a great way to use up airmiles while British Airways is still in business, and we booked it ages ago.

Of course it not so easy to escape the world of rolling news and avoid taking the office with you. There’s a worrying message on the Venice hotel website that wifi is available in all rooms, but I think I’ll forget that and dedicate my few days to the study of renaissance art and fine wines, though not necessarily in that order. I shall survey the remains of the British music industry when I get back to Blighty.

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If any Venetian students do try to run me down with The Four Seasons, I am at least protected by an ear problem that is currently quieting the world down a bit. A deaf music critic is probably as useful as card tricks on radio, but this is not the full works, just a little local difficulty that can almost certainly be cured by large doses of Grappa. Not like a few years ago when a very unpleasant inner ear infection had the effect of making music sound entirely weird, single notes sounding as discordant chords. I took the opportunity at the time to say in an editorial that Angela Gheorghiu was singing like a drain, and that if the London Symphony couldn’t do better than that the players  should take up gardening instead, swiftly diving in with an explanation before the lawyers turned apoplectic.

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As we sit and wait for the funding axe to fall, cheapskate music is all around. A colleague tells me he went searching for Gustav Holst’s Fugal Concerto in the Naxos Music Library and got the message: “Did you mean holst frugal concerto?” Look out for The Love of Two Oranges and other cost-cutting works.

Another Opening, Another Show

Friday, April 1st, 2011

by Cathy Barbash

While cultural export is again a priority in China’s new Five Year Development Plan, investment in venue construction is still more visible than investment in exportable cultural products. The latest high-profile foray is a joint venture between the Beijing Oriental Songlei Musical Development Company (of Butterflies and Love U Teresa fame) and the Dongcheng District Government of Beijing, which (like every district) wants to make itself a “Center of Culture.” The Beijing Oriental Songlei Theatre (under construction) is part of this plan. Founded in the year 1989, the parent Songlei Group of Companies is a vast conglomeration of industries dealing in real estate, commerce, education, property management, banking, finance, transportation, culture, as well as media and communications. Such conglomerates are increasingly the developers of new venues.

It will be a proscenium theater with 1200-1400 seats, smallish stage, not unlike Broadway theaters, and a pit that can accommodate about 16 players. Terrific location, just south of the Dongsishitiao subway station and directly across the street from the Ministry of Culture along the Second Ring Road. They plan to be a mostly rental house, though understand that during the early years they will have to pay to bring in a certain number of shows. The theater will also present Beijing Oriental Songlei Musical Development Company’s own musicals, including the aforementioned “Love U, Teresa” and the new magic-themed musical “The Joker’s Game.”

Their focus is musical theater and general all-ages entertainment, i.e. magic shows and that ilk; including both domestic and international productions. The rental pricing structure is still in development, but I’m guessing the aim is to be more affordable than places of comparable size such as the nearby Poly Theatre. This is definitely a for-profit venue.

The most unusual and interesting aspect of the project is not only the active involvement, but also the public acknowledgement of the continuing involvement of foreign management expertise. Chinese veteran cultural producers and officials Li Dun (Chairman), Jiang Haiyan (CEO) and Pan Yong (CEO, Beijing Oriental Songlei Theatre) are joined by Broadway veterans Tony Stimac and Don Franz as respectively Chief and Company Consultants. Dance specialist and recent Kennedy Center Fellow Alison Friedman serves as Director of Programming.

Contacted for his comments, Stimac waxed euphoric: “This is historic. To date there is not one theatre in China that a big musical can book for an open-ended run; this theatre will break that mold. On top of that, this is one of the first venues dedicated to musical theater. It really is a break through.” A grand opening Broadway gala review is slated for Oct. 28, 2011, with plans for a three-day theater-related conference the preceding week.