Category: Headlines

And the Nominees Are: The 76th Annual Race for Oscar

After looking at the nominees list for the 76th annual Oscar race released this morning, the same ‘Oh, of course,’ reaction hit me once again. No surprises (except perhaps that John Williams didn’t get nominated this year), but who expected one? Still, no need to play ostrich with head buried firmly in sand. Keeping track of these things is an interesting cultural barometer, especially in America where the ideology is that what the general public thinks is most important. And they often think of classical music as what they hear at the movies.

So, without additional fanfare or delay, the nominees are:

Best Musical Score

  • Danny Elfman for Big Fish
    The composer was previously nominated for Good Will Hunting (1997) and Men In Black (1997)
  • Gabriel Yared for Cold Mountain
    The composer was previously nominated for The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999) and won for The English Patient (1996)
  • Thomas Newman for Finding Nemo
    The composer was previously nominated for Road to Perdition (2002), American Beauty (1999), Unstrung Heroes (1995), Little Women (1994), and The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
  • James Horner for the House of Sand and Fog
    The composer was previously nominated for An American Tail (1986), Aliens (1986), Field of Dreams (1989), Braveheart (1995), Apollo 13 (1995) and A Beautiful Mind (2001). He won both the Score and Song categories in 1997 for Titanic.
  • Howard Shore for The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
    The composer was previously nominated and won for The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)

Best Song

  • “Into the West” from The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
    Music and Lyric by Fran Walsh and Howard Shore and Annie Lennox
  • “A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow” from A Mighty Wind
    Music and Lyric by Michael McKean and Annette O’Toole
  • “Scarlet Tide” from Cold Mountain
    Music and Lyric by T Bone Burnett and Elvis Costello
  • “The Triplets of Belleville” from The Triplets of Belleville
    Music by Benoit Charest and Lyric by Sylvain Chomet
  • “You Will Be My Ain True Love” from Cold Mountain
    Music and Lyric by Sting

George Arasimowicz Wins Nissim Award from ASCAP



George Arasimowicz
Photo courtesy ASCAP

George Arasimowicz has been awarded the Nissim Prize to for his piece Encomia for ?, a 26-minute work for orchestra. The prize, given to a work requiring a conductor that has not been professionally performed, includes a cash award of $5,000.

Arasimowicz is the dean of the Division of Arts, Media and Communications, and a professor of music, at the Wheaton College Conservatory of Music in Wheaton, Illinois. He earned his doctorate at the University of California, San Diego and holds degrees from McGill University, the University of Toronto, and Carleton University. Along with having received numerous fellowships and awards for composing, he also has been commissioned by PBS, NPR, and CBC broadcasting networks.

The Nissim Jury recognized five composers for Special Distinction:

  • Jeremy Cumbo of Austin, TX for Tenchi (Heaven and Earth) for Orchestra
  • Peter Knell of Pasadena, CA for Rhythm Changes for Violin and Chamber Orchestra
  • Andrew Norman of Modesto, CA for Sacred Geometry for Orchestra
  • Tracy Scott Silverman of Nashville, TN for Electric Violin Concerto
  • Orianna Webb of Akron, OH for Xylem for Orchestra

The Jury recognized the following composers for Honorable Mention:

  • James Croson of Mount Dora, FL for Concerto for Piano, Percussion, and Orchestra
  • Jocelyn Hagen of Valley City, ND for Ashes of Roses a Requiem for Choir and Orchestra
  • Robert G. Hutchinson of Tacoma, WA for Dancing at the Strand for Wind Ensemble
  • Adam Levowitz of Katy, TX for The Tell-Tale Heart for Tenor and Orchestra
  • John Fitz Rogers of Columbia, SC for The Arc of Winter for Clarinet and String Orchestra
  • Judith Lang Zaimont of Edina, MN for Symphony for Wind Orchestra in Three Scenes

Now in its 24th year, the Nissim competition is open only to ASCAP composer members. Nearly 300 submissions were received this year. The judges for this year’s Nissim Award were: Paul Lustig Dunkel, Music Director and Conductor of the Westchester Philharmonic; Paul Haas, Music Director of the New York Youth Symphony; Barry Jekowsky, Founder and Music Director of the California Symphony; and Mark Laycock, Associate Conductor of the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, and Music Director of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra (NJ).

Can January Conference Fever Warm Up New York?



William E. Terry leads a New Music Town Meeting at the 2004 CMA Conference
Photo by Randy Nordschow

Despite the relentless blistering cold weather in New York City this winter, music makers and shakers from all over the world came together to attend three important annual organization conferences taking place here in succession. Fresh on the heels of the 2004 Conference of the Association of Performing Arts Presenters (APAP) are two more major annual events which are a good way to survey what is going on in the field all over the country and to interact with many of the industry’s key players: the annual conferences of Chamber Music America (CMA), January 16-18; and, before you can catch your breath, the International Association of Jazz Educators (IAJE), which began on Thursday, January 22 and continued through this past weekend.

This year’s CMA Conference definitely felt like “back to business” after last year’s conference, which eschewed an entire day of panels for a 12-hour marathon concert celebrating the 25th anniversary of this non-profit national service organization. Although not every panel discussion was stimulating–a session that began at 9 AM on Saturday morning proporting to be about how to expand your web site’s potential was beyond painful to sit though before any coffee was offered to conference participants–but spirits were high and the energy in the exhibition rooms between sessions felt more positive than it had in years.

Perhaps this had to do with mixing things up a bit. This year, the conference was in a new hotel (one that didn’t even exist a few years ago) and deviated significantly from the almost predictable structure of the conference in years past. The formal banquet in which CMA awardees were honored was moved from the closing slot on Sunday to Saturday evening and the ASCAP Adventurous Programming Awards were given out during the opening luncheon rather than during an evening reception that for years has been more about meeting and greeting old colleagues than to listening to anything said on the podium, despite Fran Richard‘s always valiant attempts to make everyone pay attention to new music and its champions.

2004 ASCAP/CMA “ADVENTUROUS PROGRAMMING” AWARDS

 

New music, in fact, was particularly championed at this year’s conference. One highlight is always the annual wide-ranging Commissioning Showcase concert offering works by three very different composers performed by three very different ensembles. This year featured downtown experimenter Elliott Sharp‘s foray into the world of the brass quintet featuring the remarkably resourceful Meridian Arts Ensemble, Bennie Maupin‘s free-wheeling but never groove-less quartet which boggled the mind with unison runs between bass clarinet and talking drum, among a host of other sonic treats, and, finally, a gorgeous string quartet by Shafer Mahoney confidently delivered by the Corigliano Quartet. (Stay tuned for a NewMusicBox Web cast of all three of these works in May 2004.)

On Friday afternoon, the CMA Conference played host to a New Music Town Meeting discussing the viability of a New Music Network. Facilitated by William E. Terry (Terry & Associates) and co-convened with the American Music Center, Meet The Composer, and manager Sue Bernstein of Bernstein Artists Inc., the way-over-capacity room provided composers, performers, presenters, record company reps, publicists, and others the opportunity to square off in a discussion about how to take the promotion of new music to the next level.

On Saturday afternoon, a session was devoted to ASCAP’s composer/performer showcase series Thru The Walls, curated by Martha Mooke and presented at The Cutting Room, a New York club. The series was offered as a model for thinking beyond the traditional venues for new music events. And on Sunday morning, American Music Center Executive Director Richard Kessler moderated a session with representatives from several of the key music publishers to discuss ways in which ensembles and presenters can forge more effective partnerships with publishers. One wonders why a session as important as this was scheduled so early in the morning, almost guaranteeing that it will not reach most of the people who should have been there. New music needs to reach everyone at this conference and therefore should be scheduled as the theme for one of the conference’s plenary sessions (a prime spot with no competing sessions). As entertaining as architect Rafael Viñoly was, are his rather idiosyncratic descriptions of concert hall acoustics really more worthy of a plenary session than a practical session about new music?

The other plenary session featured a speech by NEA Chairman Dana Gioia which was typically long on biographical details and short on anything specific about what is going on at the NEA. Gioia repeatedly stated that is “apolitical” although his claim that Democrat-led state legislatures reduced arts funding even more than Republican-led ones felt like a stump speech. While he laudably stated, “I don’t want to live in a nation where arts education and access to the arts is only available to people with money,” to resounding applause from the room, he also claimed, “Everywhere I go people tell me that arts education is declining. Whether that is true, I have no idea.” He dismissed the Robert Mapplethorpe controversy–“I’m bored talking about the controversies of the previous century”–claiming that he wants to focus on the future, yet the NEA’s biggest current project is a plan to introduce Shakespeare to all 50 states as well as the U.S. Military.

While Gioia claimed at the CMA Conference that the NEA is “not strong enough to embarrass a politician and win,” attempting to engender the notion that the arts must stand above politics, it was a provocative conference counterpoint that there was a session at the IAJE Conference titled “The Popularity of Anti-Culture and Right Extremism Against Jazz and World Music.”

If the schedule of CMA’s conference guaranteed that not everyone could attend important sessions, IAJE’s schedule makes the New York City Subway System’s schedule feel efficient by comparison. The bursting-at-the-seems conference, which this year absurdly required the space of two different hotels (in this weather no less) frequently featured more than 10 sessions at a time, each only an hour long and none starting on time since everyone (including session speakers) had to somehow find their way through the maze between the hotels.

That said, IAJE on day one was completely mobbed. It was, in fact, the most crowded music-related conference I have ever attended in my life (although from all reports I’ve heard APAP, which I missed this year, was equally rush hour-esque). As such it is cause for celebration and hope. Jazz is more popular than ever, a resounding contradiction to the majority of panelists from television, radio, and daily newspapers involved in a Thursday morning session, “Going Mainstream–Jazz in the Non-Jazz Media” who made excuses for rarely covering jazz artists claiming they need their programming to appeal to “mainstream audiences.” Indeed!

American Rep. Highlights Levine’s Inaugural BSO Season



Incoming BSO Music Director James Levine
Photo courtesy the BSO

The Boston Symphony Orchestra and incoming Music Director James Levine have announced a 2004-05 season notable for its commitment to American repertoire. Wasting no time, Levine, the first American-born conductor to take the helm of the 124-year-old ensemble, has put his mark on the inaugural season.

Levine will spend 12 of the BSO’s 23-week subscription season on the podium, beginning his tenure with a performance of Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 on October 22. The season lineup features a significant amount of contemporary work from American and European composers combined with masterworks from the canon.

New work commissioned from Milton Babbitt (Concerti for Orchestra), John Harbison, and Charles Wuorinen (Piano Concerto No. 4 with pianist Peter Serkin) will be given world premiere performances by the BSO under Levine’s direction. In addition, his planned concert programs also feature works by such celebrated contemporary composers as Elliott Carter, György Ligeti, and Witold Lutoslawski.

Carter’s Symphonia: Sum fluxae pretium spei will be paired with a new work, Micomicón, written as a prelude to the Symphonia and his first commission from the BSO. Carter’s Sonata for flute, oboe, cello, and harpsichord will be featured on a Boston Symphony Chamber Players concert program with Levine at the piano.

Levine has also put together “a wide-ranging survey of seminal 20th-century repertoire”—a program that includes Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht, Messaien’s Et exspecto resurrectionem mortuorum, Stravinsky’s Symphonies of Wind Instruments, and Bartók’s Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta.

Several of this season’s guest conductors will also lead contemporary work. David Zinman‘s program opens with a new piece from Michael Gandolfi—scheduled to receive its world premiere during the 2004 Tanglewood Festival of Contemporary Music. Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Music Director Robert Spano, another notable conductor on the new music scene, will lead the BSO in the world premiere of a BSO commission from Yehudi Wyner for piano and orchestra.

47th Annual Association of Performing Arts Presenters’ Conference Highlights

The Association of Performing Arts Presenters47th Annual Members Conference concludes today after a busy weekend here in New York City. Careers may not be made or broken during the four-day event, but a lot of business does get done at this yearly industry booking party when more than 3,500 performing arts professionals gather at the Hilton to meet with artists and their representatives, discuss the issues and concerns that face the field, and just generally network and socialize with their colleagues from across the country.

Conference Delegate Index

  • Average seating capacity for presenting delegates: 1,380 seats
  • Median expense budget for presenting delegates: $762,500
  • Number of Countries Represented: 20
  • Number of artists showcases: 1,500 (as of 12/26)
  • Number of Exhibiting Members: 347(statistics courtesy APAP)

This year’s event was built around the theme “Embracing a New Era: Creativity. Courage. Choices.” To help attendees navigate the myriad events scheduled over the four-day conference, they were broken down into five “tracks”—Art and Politics, K-12 Education, Classical Music, Hip-Hop, and World Music. The classical music track specifically sought to “celebrate the artists, composers, and scholars who are infusing classical music with vitality and bringing to it a 21st century context.”

Playwright Tony Kushner as the featured speaker ensured a capacity crowd at the opening plenary session. Kushner spoke at length about his work and personal politics with John Killacky, program officer for the San Francisco-based Arts and Culture. Playing to the assumed politically liberal crowd, Kushner covered a range of hot topics, including the “appallingly dangerous level” of public funding for the arts and the NEA‘s “catastrophic” decision to no longer fund individual artists. Despite the seriousness of the topics he covered, Kushner got repeated laughs by pointing out obvious inconsistencies that affect the field, such as the fact that a reviewer for the Times eats at a restaurant at least three times in case the chef is having an off night but goes to the theater only once before embracing or condemning a show. He also noted the irony that the new NEA program to promote the arts across America features William Sheakspeare, “who, of course, is not an American.”

Far from being pessimistic, Kushner said that even though there is a tremendous crisis in this country, “despair is the lie we tell ourselves. We’re all still citizens of a democracy…[and] there is a great deal in this country that is magnificent.” He fell short of endorsing a specific presidential candidate, but spoke frankly about his dislike of the Bush administration’s policies and urged the audience to not be complacent but to get involved quickly while the situation could still be turned around.

Regina Carter, Daniel Bernard Roumain, DJ Spooky, and Samuel Adler were among the composers and musicians who spoke to delegates as part of the “Artist Voices” series. In addition, John King and Vijay Iyer covered the latest developments in experimental music and multi-media opera. Nonesuch Records‘ partnership with the new Zankel Hall was highlighted as a case study in innovative, mutually beneficial collaboration.

“The State of Classical Music” was one of many “Burning Issues” panels assembled to tackle hot issues in the field. Moderated by the AMC‘s own Executive Director Richard Kessler, this one approached the topic from a decidedly forward thinking perspective. Panelists included violinist/composer Todd Reynolds, concert pianist Navah Perlman, presenter/curator Limor Tomer, and composer/journalist Greg Sandow, who did their best in the three-hour time slot to cover an array of concerns plaguing the industry. Lest things get too pessimistic, Kessler also took a moment to steer the conversation towards celebrating some if its successes. Among the highlights of the wide-ranging conversation, the panelists and attendees discussed why classical music has lost its definition; the need for presenters to embrace the music they are passionate about and not institute programs and marketing strategies out of fear; the continued strong enrollment in conservatories across the country and the changing roles these musicians will need to be prepared to fill; the need to engage audiences in dialogue to both understand their needs and open their eyes to new experiences; the potentials of education efforts for both children and adult audiences; and the evolution of the performance experience from tradition-bound performance practice to a more comfortable experience for today’s American audiences.

There were also scores of exhibitors on hand in the hall showing off their artist rosters and industry related services. Hundreds of performers presented showcases of their work hoping to attract the attention (and available booking dates) of presenters.

John Cage Uncaged in the UK

Broadcast Information

Cage in his American Context

January 16, 2004—7:30 p.m.
Barbican Hall
LIVE on BBC Radio 3
Shown on BBC4 at 8.30pm

Complete program

Lawrence Foster, conductor
Philip Mead, piano
BBC Symphony Orchestra

SCHUMAN: New England Triptych
CAGE: The Seasons
COWELL: Concerto for Piano and Orchestra
IVES: Central Park in the Dark
ANTHEIL: A Jazz Symphony
COPLAND: El salón México
CAGE: 4’33” tacet for large orchestra

BBC News has reported that BBC Radio 3 will broadcast a performance of John Cage’s iconic 4’33” live as performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra. To accomplish this on radio, the station will have to turn off an emergency system which cuts in if there is dead air. TV viewers will also be able to watch the event when BBC4 broadcasts the concert.

The performance takes place on Friday at London’s Barbican Centre, as part of the first concert in a weekend of planned performances of Cage’s work (January 16-18, 2004). “John Cage Uncaged” celebrates “one of the most extraordinary figures in 20th century artistic life,” according to the BBC Symphony Orchestra Web site.

The event also includes films, discussions, and many other concert performances of his works and others, plus a lecture by an expert about mushrooms, Cage’s favorite topic. For a complete listing, see the festival Web site.

***
Variations: A John Cage Film, Video, and Music Festival

On this side of the pond, New York City’s Anthology Film Archives has dedicated an entire festival to John Cage, their first devoted to a composer. The five-day event (January 21-25, 2004) “focuses on movies that invoke Cage in words, in sound, in action and in thought. From Cage-scored experimental shorts, to feature-length documentaries about his works and collaborators, these 14 programs bring to light the brilliantly diverse legacy and influence of John Cage,” according to the Anthology Film Archives’ Web site, which also offers a complete schedule of events.

12 Composers Receive 2003 Fromm Commissions



Eleanor Cory, Mathew Rosenblum, and Eric Moe
(l to r) are among the twelve composers to receive 2003 Fromm Commissions

 

Twelve composers have been awarded $10,000 Fromm commissions from the Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard University.

The composers, selected from among the 149 applications received, are:

In addition to the substantial commissioning subsidy awarded to the composer ($5,000 is provided upfront, which must be repaid to the Foundation if the work is not completed within three years), an additional $3000 may be requested by the group performing the premiere of the commissioned work. These funds are available up to six years after the award date.

The Fromm Music Foundation’s mission is “to bring contemporary concert music closer to the public.” In addition to this commissioning program, the foundation sponsors the annual Fromm Contemporary Music Series at Harvard and supports the Festival of Contemporary Music at Tanglewood.

Share what you want, keep what you want: The New Copyright

Necessity may be the mother of invention, but I suspect that the earlier inventions of other creative individulas are often the father. For example, ever read a poem and thought of the perfect way to set it? Language can have intense inspirational power, but if the author of that text or a respresentative still holds copyright control, the experience of obtaining the necessary clearance to perform the derivative work can leave a composer wishing inspriration had never hit. Even if all the interested parties would be perfectly agreeable to the usage, they still have to be tracked down and paperwork needs to be drafted and signed before the piece can ever see the light of day. The moral many composers learn? Stick to Emily Dickinson. Rather a loss for modern culture, despite Dickinson’s admitted charms. We don’t live in a vacuum. How can we be expected to create in one?

Since it’s the age of the Internet and all, why not type a few keywords into a search engine and retrieve text or film that the authors have specifically designated as available to others for the creation of new works and avoid the headaches? That’s the simple but big idea that Creative Commons launched a year ago and continues to develop—encouraging the growth of an international public domain. In response to increasingly restrictive default copyright rules (we’ve come a long way from the founding fathers’ conception of how long and how much protection the law offers at the expense of the public domain), Creative Commons gives creators access to free DIY copyright licenses that can be specially tailored to protect the work as much or a little as the creator wants.

Among those already taking advantage of the idea is the Berklee College of Music which has launched a program providing free music lessons online protected by a “Some Rights Reserved” Creative Commons license. Opsound, a cross of experimental record label/website that encourages open sharing and communication among musicians, has developed a large pool of sound work protected by the Creative Commons “Attribution-ShareAlike license”.

View two Flash-based shorts: “Get Creative” which explains the history and launch of Creative Commons, and “Reticulum Rex” which revisits Creative Commons a year after launch and looks toward the future.

How to find and use a Creative Commons license

Text courtesy Creative Commons

To create a license, visit the Creative Commons site and answer these three questions:

  • Do you want to require attribution?
  • Do you want to allow commercial uses?
  • Do you want to allow derivative works?

Based on these choices, Creative Commons’ software pulls up the appropriate license and provides an image and text that you can place on a Web site or include in printed material. You can post the commons deed (a simple statement of license) on your Web site and link to the legal document. Creative Commons also provides code for you to link to their Resource Description Framework for your license.

As long as this information is linked from your document, other computers (with RDF-reading ability) accessing the document will know the rights and permissions. This is crucial as the Web moves from the computer-to-human paradigm to the computer-to-computer paradigm.

What’s next? Look for the ability to add more metadata to your creations, and the integration of Creative Commons metadata into search engines like Google.

The concept is spreading globally. Glenn Otis Brown, Executive Director of Creative Commons, took some time to talk a bit about the history, philosophy, and future goals of this intellectual property innovation.

Molly Sheridan: Creative Commons was not developed by two guys in a dorm room, it’s a very sophisticated operation. How did this organization come to be what it is today?

Glenn Otis Brown: It started out as an idea of [cyberlaw and intellectual property expert] Lawrence Lessig, [MIT computer science professor] Hal Abelson and [public domain web publisher] Eric Eldred. They all met in Cambridge around the same time, when Abelson was a computer science professor at MIT and Lessig was a law professor at Harvard. Around that time, Lessig took on Eric Eldred’s case challenging the extension of the copyright act. As that lawsuit was getting started, the three of them started talking about how they thought that the public domain and the cause for open access for creative material and education material needed suppliemented by an active effort more than a kind of principal litigation. It needed a voluntary, grassroots movement to rebuild the public domain and build up public access.

That was the idea for Creative Commons, something that would be a non-adversarial, non-advocacy way of supporting the public domain by simply expanding the amount of materials that were available for people to reuse and build upon. Somewhere in between public domain and copyright, which is where the Creative Commons idea really is now. So it started as a conversation between them and some students at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School. One of the big principals behind it from the begining has been the idea that there’s an unmet demand for some kind of moderate solution to what’s going on in the copyright world right now. Copyright is very granular and very much a spectrum of different kinds of rights and amounts of control, but the law doesn’t make it easy to exploit that because it applies automatically and fully to all works as soon as they’re created and it lasts a really long time. Copyright holders don’t have to put anybody on notice whether something’s copyrighted or not, you just have to assume that you have to ask permission. It’s really not an efficient way of distributing creative content especially if you’re the kind of person who doesn’t mind if the public makes certain uses of your work. If you look at the list of exclusive rights, the copyright holder gets six or seven, any one of which can be isolated and granted out to the public to a greater or lesser degree. The problem is that to do that in a reliable way you have to spend money on lawyers. So we thought, let’s create some legal documents that help people express this stuff up front so that rights do not have to be cleared along the way and, in this three-tiered way, let’s do it in a way that humans can understand, let’s do it in a way that lawyers can understand and let’s do it in a way that machines can understand, all in the name of efficiency.

Molly Sheridan: I understand that some people may have not even been aware of the extent of modern copyright or the needs behind maintaining a healthy public domain, but was there specifically some anecdotal instances you recall that showed you had to make sure something like Creative Commons happened?

Glenn Otis Brown: Well, yeah, there are a few different things. There’s a great d
emand in the acedemic community for professors and educators to be able to share things voluntarily without going through a centralized rights clearing department. It’s a very tedious thing to put together course materials because you’re constantly having to clear rights even when in the vast majority of cases the rights holder says, please, you don’t even have to ask me.

In the arts it’s important to distinguish the big commercial pressures from the rest who actually produce the majority of culture that gets created. We saw informally a demand for this kind of thing in different areas of the arts, basically by asking how they felt about putting their work online. They answered with the different kinds of conditions and restrictions we have built into our licenses. A lot of people don’t mind if people copy it, but don’t want to see it turn up in a Ford truck commercial. Or don’t want people to pass it off as their own, resell it, or some way alter it. So we took those very intuitive concerns and conditions and put them into different types of licenses that let’s people free up those distribution rights, which in and of itself is essentially taking advantage of the Net.

Even among the commercial and cultural content producers you can see that a lot of people get this. Pop musicians will put on a B-side track that is just one component of a song, essentially encouraging DJs or kids with nice software to make something new from it. There is a realization that it can be a good thing and bring more business or more attention your way to leverage your rights in a clever way.

Molly Sheridan: Yeah, I watched your introductory movie which tells the story of the guy who further developed tracks by the White Stripes. It was pretty enlightening (watch the movie). I think that example makes the CC concept really clear. So maybe I should give you an opportunity to brag a little bit. I think there are people who might argue that if you’re sharing it, it must not be very good. What’s your expereince? Are things of quality getting shared?

Glenn Otis Brown: Well, a great example which has become one of our poster children is a book by Cory Doctorow. He’s a science fiction author based in San Francisco and he published his first novel on his site under a creative commons license and gave his readers the choice if downloading it for free under a pretty restrictive license—no derivative works, no commercial use, have to give him credit—and then right next to that they had the choice of going to amazon.com and buying the paperback published by Tor Books. The first couple of weeks he saw 50,000 downloads of the book. By this point it’s over 100,000 and he’s sold out his first print run of the books for sale. His publisher was always on board with this and I think it’s exceeded their expectations. He’s got a couple of new books that will be coming out soon and now he’s got a readership of over 100,000 which is pretty amazing for a first-timer. So he’s been a good success story as far as a measure of quality.

To educate people about folk music, Roger McGuinn of the Byrds puts up one song a month that he’s recorded himself. He’ll take a song from the public domain and record his own version of it, so he gets the copyright on the performance but not the underlying composition, and then he puts it up in something called the folk den under a CC license so it’s free to download, free to put on a file sharing network, and he doesn’t allow derivative works.

On our site we feature interesting pieces of art or educational materials that are pretty amazing. There are also hundreds of bands on this site called Opsound, which is a big pool of royalty free music from around the world that people contribute to under a license of ours. So we’ve seen some really interesting kinds of creativity that would otherwise be crowded by legal doubt. We also saw someone take a plain acoustic guitar track off of Opsound, re-record it with a lead violin part over it, and put it back into opsound. So you see fun things like that that are technically illegal without a Creative Commons license unless you go through the trouble of finding the author and asking permission…

Molly Sheridan: Well, a lot of your introductory movie is devoted to explaining how a Creative Commons license helps eliminate that middleman, but does the middleman want to be eliminated? Are you getting any challenge on that?

Glenn Otis Brown: Well, that overstates the case a little bit. Rights clearing societies are people we’d like to work with. They serve an important function. The place where we want to get rid of the middle man is where the middle man isn’t even necessary. It’s a social waste to have to ask permission for something when the author would automatically grant permission for it. Intermediaries serve a great purpose in other contexts and lawyers are great if there’s a dispute over a license, certainly in the all rights reserved universe—that’s their role. But it’s perverse that there should be any friction if someone would like to allow certain usages while retaining others.

Another kind of intermediary that we like is people like Common Content. What they do is provide a place where anyone can go and register their Creative Commons works. They’re not hosting the material but they have a really well organized library, a card catalogue essentially. We want to encourage that to outside businesses or non-profits to sort of compete to provide a lot of services around the licenses.

Molly Sheridan: It seems some people have responded in the face of new Internet technology that there is a need for more copyright control, not less, especially where music is concerned? How would you respond to that philosophy?

Glenn Otis Brown: That’s fine. They can exercise that philosophy is my general response. That’s one of the really nice things about our model—it’s completely voluntary so it’s a way of declaring some rights reserved that doesn’t affect the people who want to declare all rights reserved. We would just like for people who are willing to share to be able to do so. We’ll respect the all rights reserved people and we want them to respect us. Our system is very much based on copyright as well.

Molly Sheridan: So let’s say I’m a composer and have music I’m willing to share. I wouldn’t mind a choreographer or a filmmaker using it, so I go to your web site, I fill out the paper work. What happens next?

Glenn Otis Brown: It depends on what you want. You could license it under such terms that where you get credit and you’re willing to let people make new versions of it or make a recording of it. If you wanted to protect your right to make money off of it but you didn’t mind if people play around with it or if high school or college or non-profit community orchestras make some use of it, then you could say no commercial use. Then you could see what happens and if it ever got picked up by someone who is interested in commercializing it, you could then demand that they pay you for it. Or if you’re simply interested in getting your stuff performed then it would be particularly attractive to people if you said they’re free to even commercialize something out of it. That’s an extra step that not everyone wants to do, but it’s at least an option.

Molly Sheridan: So how are people connecting with each other? You are featuring some of these artists on your home page and making people aware of them that way, but in general what third party organizations are popping up that are good for music? If I’m a choreographer and I want to look for this kind of music, where do I go?

Glenn Otis Brown: The Common Content place I mentioned before is a good example, and they’re acros
s media. Opsound.org is a good example for pop and electronic music and everything there is licensed so you’re free to reuse. It’s hundreds of songs. We also try and promote stuff here that catches our eye and we’re definitely encouraging community sites. We also are working with technologists and the developer community, encouraging people to help us build tools for searching for these works. Every license has embedded in it a machine-readable version with markup language. The world we hope for is one in which you go to any search engine and type in “photographs available for non-commercial use and empire state building” and you get a list of things that are out there, and it actually uses the power of the search engine, because there’s no better database right now than the really good search engines. Right now there aren’t many tools that will go out and find that stuff but there are about a million links back to our licenses and the more we populate the web, the more interested different kinds of tool developers will be in creating things that go out and find them.

Molly Sheridan: So say I’m very cynical, and even after knowing all this I’m still unconvinced why anyone would want to let things go into the public pool, even to varying degrees…

Glenn Otis Brown: Well to the varying degrees is the really important part. I mean they feel satisfied that they are getting as much protection as they would ever want, so they aren’t loosing anything because they’re giving up certain rights that they would never have enforced in the first place. The vast majority of culture that gets produced is not-for-profit. It’s done for the love of it or for interest in the community or not for money but for the reputational value and to get their name out there so they can be recognized for what they do. No one picks a creative commons license that doesn’t require attribution. That’s the most important thing to people—the recognition that they’ve created something.

Technology and culture are very much all about collaboration. There are people who want to see what it would be like to build a world where there’s a little more freedom built into the system. The idea of a big pool of royalty free culture that you can contribute too and in return you can draw from it is pretty appealing to a lot of people.

Glenn Otis Brown is Executive Director of Creative Commons. Glenn graduated summa cum laude from the University of Texas at Austin in 1996 and magna cum laude from Harvard Law School in 2000. At Harvard, Glenn was a member of the Harvard Law Review and worked at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, where he organized Signal or Noise?, a digital music conference and concert, in cooperation with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Last year, Glenn was assistant producer of Digital Age, a New York public TV show hosted by Andrew Shapiro. He has published articles on copyright and other issues in The Economist, the Harvard Law Review, The New Republic Online, and the Texas Observer, and has made presentations at the South by Southwest Music Festival and 2600 Magazine‘s Hope Conference.

George Crumb Named Musical America Composer of the Year

The Musical America International Directory of the Performing Arts has announced this year’s 2004 Award recipients. Among them, George Crumb has been named Composer of the Year and composer/trumpeter Wynton Marsalis has been named Musician of the Year. Other winners are: Joseph Flummerfelt, Conductor of the Year; Susan Graham, Vocalist of the Year; Philharmonic Baroque Orchestra, Ensemble of the Year.

The Musician of the Year award, established in 1960, is the oldest and most prestigious of the awards given (the winner is traditionally featured on the cover of the annual Musical America directory). The directory includes articles and artist profiles written by critics and commentators on the contemporary music scene, as well as comprehensive listings, artist managers’ reports, and overviews of 2003 milestones in the international performing arts world.

Composer of the Year: George Crumb

The award to Crumb is especially appropriate recognition as he prepares to celebrate his 75th-birthday year in 2004 with concerts, residencies, and master classes around the country. In the 1960s and 1970s, George Crumb produced a series of compositions that were highly successful, earning the composer numerous international performances, recordings, and awards. Many of these were vocal works based on the poetry of Federico Garcia Lorca, including Ancient Voices of Children (1970); Madrigals, Books 1-4 (1965,69); Night of the Four Moons (1969); and Songs, Drones and Refrains of Death (1968). Other major works from this period include: Black Angels (1970), for electric string quartet; Vox Balaenae (1971), for electric flute, electric cello and amplified piano; Makrokosmos, Volumes 1 and 2 (1972, 73) for amplified piano; Music for a Summer Evening (1974) for two amplified pianos and percussion; and Crumb’s largest score–Star-Child (1977), for soprano, solo trombone, antiphonal children’s voices, male speaking choir, bell ringers and large orchestra.

Crumb’s recent works include: Quest (1994) for guitar and chamber ensemble; Mundus Canis (1998) for guitar and percussion; Eine Kleine Mitternachtmusik (2001) for amplified piano; …Unto the Hills (2002) for folk singer, amplified piano and percussion quartet; and Otherwordly Resonances (2002) for two amplified pianos. Just released this month is the seventh volume in Bridge Records’ ongoing series of Crumb’s complete works, supervised by the composer.

George Crumb is the recipient of numerous awards, including a 2001 Grammy for Best Contemporary Composition (Star-Child) and a Pulitzer Prize for Echoes of Time and the River in 1968. He was elected as a member to the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1975.

Crumb studied at the Mason College of Music in Charleston, the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana under Eugene Weigel, the Hochschule für Musik under Boris Blacher, and the University of Michigan (received the D.M.A. in 1959) with Ross Lee Finney. After teaching at Hollins College, Virginia and at the University of Colorado, Boulder, he took a position on the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia in 1958 where he remained until his retirement in 1997.

Musician of the Year: Wynton Marsalis

marsalis
Wynton Marsalis
Photo courtesy Jazz at Lincoln Center

Pulitzer Prize and multiple Grammy Award-winning composer and trumpeter Wynton Marsalis is co-founder and artistic director of Jazz at Lincoln Center as well as the driving force in the creation of the organization’s new home in New York’s Time Warner Building, due to open in October 2004. In addition to leading his own septet and the always-touring Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, he is one of today’s most respected teachers and spokesmen for music education.

Born near New Orleans in 1961, Marsalis began his classical training on trumpet at age 12 and entered The Juilliard School in 1979. He soon became recognized as the most impressive trumpeter at the conservatory. He is now on Juilliard’s faculty, in Jazz Studies, and the Board of Trustees. He made his recording debut in 1982, and over the past two decades produced nearly 40 jazz and classical recordings for Columbia Jazz and Sony Classical, winning nine Grammy Awards. In 2003, Marsalis signed with EMI’s Blue Note Records, with his initial recording due out in spring 2004.

Marsalis also devotes a significant amount of time to composing new works, many of which are commissioned from and premiered by JALC. He has written ballets for choreography by Twyla Tharp (Jump Start), Garth Fagan (Citi Movement/Griot New York), the New York City Ballet (Jazz: Six Syncopated Movements and Them Twos), and Judith Jamison for the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater (Sweet Release). His 1994 oratorio Blood on the Fields was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1997, the first to a jazz artist. For the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center he composed a string quartet ( At the Octoroon Balls) and, taking off from Stravinsky, A Fiddler’s Tale. His most recent work, All Rise (1999), is an evening-length, twelve-part composition commissioned by Kurt Masur and the New York Philharmonic.

Through JALC education programs, Marsalis conducts master classes, lectures, and concerts for students of all ages and created the Essentially Ellington high school jazz band competition and festival and the newly published Jazz for Young People Curriculum. He was featured in the PBS television production of Marsalis on Music and the NPR series Making the Music, which won a Peabody Award in 1996. In addition, he was named one of “America’s 25 Most Influential People” by Time magazine and one of “The 50 Most Influential Boomers” by Life magazine. In March 2001, Marsalis was awarded the United Nations designation of “Messenger of Peace” by United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, and in June 2002 he received the Congressional “Horizon Award.”

36th Annual ASCAP Deems Taylor Awards

Last Thursday night the 36th Annual ASCAP Deems Taylor Award recipients were honored at a ceremony in New York City. Established in 1968, the awards seek to honor excellence in music writing, with recognition going to authors, journalists, broadcasters, and publishers across genres. The awards are split between symphonic and pop categories (jazz is considered pop here, an irony noted by the presenters).

The recognition also comes with a cash prize. Books are awarded $500 and articles $250.

The evening had a bittersweet note to it since family members accepted awards on behalf of Arthur Berger and Lise A. Waxer, both of whom had died (Berger was aware of the award and had planned on attending the ceremony). Timothy White‘s widow also made a moving speech appreciative of how ASCAP had honored her husband during his career as a music journalist and editor. She announced the second recipient of an award for biography writers established in his honor.

The evening also included performances of a duet for piano and cello by Berger and two tunes penned by Hoagy Carmichael, the subject of Richard M. Sudhalter’s award-winning biography.

The seasoned panel of Deems Taylor judges (all ASCAP members) juried the awards again this year, including Frank J. Oteri (NewMusicBox editor), Paul Moravec, and Charles Dodge (former AMC board president) for symphonic articles and books. Matthew Shipp, Larry John McNally, and Wesley Stace handled pop articles, and Julie Flanders, Deborah Frost, and Richard Miller selected the pop book awards. Each committed to a heavy load of reading (the concert music panel read some 45 books and 70 articles this year) and the judges themselves presented the awards to the winners at the ceremony. In their remarks, the judges especially emphasized awards going to non-music publications such as Creative Loafing and Richmond Times-Dispatch.

This year’s winners are:

Authors and Publishers

Alfred Appel, Jr.—Jazz Modernism: From Ellington and Armstrong to Matisse and Joyce—Alfred A. Knopf Publishers
Arthur Berger—Reflections of an American Composer—University of California Press
Michael Hicks—Henry Cowell: Bohemian—University of Illinois Press
Larry Hicock—Castles Made of Sound: The Story of Gil Evans—Da Capo Press
Charles M. Joseph—Stravinsky & Balanchine: A Journey of Invention—Yale University Press
Allen Shawn—Arnold Schoenbergs Journey—Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc.
Lise A. Waxer—The City of Musical Memory—Wesleyan University Press

Timothy White Award for Musical Biography

Richard M. Sudhalter—Stardust Melody: The Life and Music of Hoagy Carmichael—Oxford University Press

Writers and Publishers

Eli Attie—The Washington Post
Clarke Bustard—Richmond Times-Dispatch
Austin Clarkson & David Holzman—Bridge Records (liner notes)
Jim Dulzo—Jazz Times
Mark Gresham—Creative Loafing
Laurence Hobgood—JVC Jazz Festival Program
Ashley Kahn—Verve Music Group (liner notes)
Alan Light—GQ, New Yorker, and Spin
Ralph P. Locke—Ash gate Publishing, Ltd.
Lewis Rowell—Tom Mathiesen and Andreas Giger, editors—University of Nebraska Press

Broadcast Awards

WFMT Radio & WFMT Radio Network—Steve Robinson, Producer

A&E—Live By Request
Tony Bennett, Creator
Danny Bennett, Executive Producer/Creator
Paul Rapapport, Exec. Producer/Creator
Andy Kadison, Exec. Producer
Jodi Hurwitz, Exec. Producer
Mitch Maketansky, Supervising Producer
Delia Fine, A&E Exec. Producer
Emilio Nunez, A&E Producer

Internet Award

Alliance Entertainment Company—allmusic.com—All Music Guide

Special Recognition

Jon Garelick—The Boston Phoenix
Steve Reich—Writings on Music 1965-2000—Oxford University Press
Douglas McLennan—ArtsJournal.com
Jim O’Neal/Amy Van Singel—The Voice of the Blues—Routledge