Category Archives: Classical Music News

Harvey Phillips, 1929-2010

Via Richard Schneider comes word of the passing of Harvey Phillips — tuba virtuoso, pedagogue, and personnel manager for the Symphony of the Air, Leopold Stokowski, and Igor Stravinsky, among many others. Phillips, whose professional career began when he played with the virtuoso Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus Band as a teenager, was also a prolific freelance recording artist with ad hoc ensembles and pickup orchestras.  Indiana University, where Phillips held the tiitle of Distinguished Professor Emeritus, has set up a blog page for tributes and reminiscences by students and colleagues.

UPDATE: Daniel Wakin’s obituary has just been posted to NYTimes.com.

Such a Bargain: Anne Akiko Meyers Outbids World for “Molitor” Strad

ClassicalMusic.org.uk has the details. Meyers laid out $3.6 million for the “Molitor” Stradivarius, which has quite the pedigree of previous ownership — Napoleon, the Curtis Institute (who loaned it to, among others, Henri Temianka), and Elmar Oliveira. Meyers’s first US appearance with the Molitor will be in Pasadena.

NYPhil Gets Morales Boost?

The NY Times reports that the New York Philharmonic has offered its principal clarinet seat, vacant since the retirement of Stanley Drucker, to Philadelphia Orchestra principal Ricardo Morales. Much as I would love to see him with the Philharmonic, his defection would prove another blow to the financially-buffeted Philadelphians.

The Gods Could Use a Good Mechanic

The New York music and theater scene is abuzz over the mechanical failure that left the gods of Valhalla earthbound and unable to enter their spiffy new digs at the end of last night’s performance of Robert Lepage’s spectacular new production of Wagner’s Das Rheingold at the MET. James Oestreich was in Times Square for the soggy HD broadcast. The production is getting wildly mixed reviews. David Finkle calls it a “five-alarm disappointment.” The LA Times’ James Taylor reported a mixed reception for the production by the audience vut warm ovations for the cast and orchestra — and a bit of shock at James Levine’s appearance. Corinna da Fonseca-Wollheim feels the production serves the music well, and reports that “no Rhinemaidens were crushed by the 40-ton set”, and the savvy, sassy Tyro Theater Critic liked it a lot, calling it “a blend of the old and the new that strikes gold.” Heidi Waleson mostly enjoyed it, and mirrored TTC on the point of “a high-tech extravaganza oddly married to an old-fashioned stand-and-sing aesthetic.” I had a schedule conflict last night, but I will be catching an upcoming performance and, no doubt, weiging in.