This may be something you want to keep under wraps and not open until Saturday week in the privacy of your living room.

I can’t resist sharing a retrieved video of the great Lebanese singer Fairouz, still in her 20s, taking one of the season’s favourites in cultivated microtones.

The title is Leilet Eid – you may know it by another name – and I’d be surprised if you ask for your money back, even if the opening wouldn’t quite make it into Mahler’s fourth symphony.
and here’s the artist in her youth.

This may be something you want to keep under wraps and not open until Saturday week in the privacy of your living room.

I can’t resist sharing a retrieved video of the great Lebanese singer Fairouz, still in her 20s, taking one of the season’s favourites in cultivated microtones.

The title is Leilet Eid – you may know it by another name – and I’d be surprised if you ask for your money back, even if the opening wouldn’t quite make it into Mahler’s fourth symphony.
and here’s the artist in her youth.

My colleague Fiona Maddocks has just tweeted that Eileen Cooper has been elected Keeper at the Royal Academy, the first woman to hold the post since Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Gainsborough, Angelika Kauffman and 31 others founded the RA in Piccadilly in 1768. The Keeper, elected for three years, is responsible for the art school, an often turbulent role.

Kauffman, come to think of it, would have made a great Keeper but never got the nomination. Cooper, I hear, is a singularly popular choice.
Here are two samples of her work and a snap of the artist herself.









My colleague Fiona Maddocks has just tweeted that Eileen Cooper has been elected Keeper at the Royal Academy, the first woman to hold the post since Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Gainsborough, Angelika Kauffman and 31 others founded the RA in Piccadilly in 1768. The Keeper, elected for three years, is responsible for the art school, an often turbulent role.

Kauffman, come to think of it, would have made a great Keeper but never got the nomination. Cooper, I hear, is a singularly popular choice.
Here are two samples of her work and a snap of the artist herself.









Peter Andry, head of EMI Classics for many years and founder of Warner Classics, has died in a London hospice, around the corner from his much-loved Abbey Road studios. He was 83 and had been suffering from cancer.

(Cover shows Andry with Rostropovich, Richter, Karajan, Oistrakh, at the turbulent recording session of Beethoven’s triple concerto. Photo: Siegfried Lauterwasser)
After Walter Legge’s departure in 1963, Peter pulled EMI Classics together and kept it in profit for quarter of a century by a policy that he described to me, tongue in cheek, as ‘balancing God and Mammon’. God was the conductor Herbert von Karajan whom he pursued with an open chequebook until the mogul returned to his home label. Mammon was Andre Previn who, endowed with a Beatles mop-top and Hollywood wives, sold mountains of LPs to the Christmas market. 
When in 1988 the EMI board, chaired by Colin Southgate, brought in an American axeman, Jim Fifield, Peter saw the writing on the wall and took early retirement. ‘Fifield never got rid of me,’ he was prone to say, ‘he just never got back to me.’
Barely had the ink dried on Peter’s farewell cards than he set up office in Baker Street, across the road from the EMI, as head of Warner Classics, a comoany he formed by acquiring small and medium-sized labels in France, Germany, Finland and the US. 
Twice a year, he would invite me to lunch at Baker Street, cooked in-house and served by a butler. The moment the door shut, we would remove our jackets and, for a happy hour, be as indiscreet as we possibly could about the entire classical panoply, trusting that not a word would ever leave the room. Nor did it. He was more guarded, though no less helpful, when I asked for leads while researching my history of classical recording.
In his last years we saw each other at concerts and, from time to time, at some musical charity or other to which Peter would lend his name. He was – with the likes of Joan Sutherland, Barry Humphries, Germaine Greer, Peter Porter and Rolf Harris – part of a golden generation of gifted Australians who enriched British life and world culture. As a musician who arrived with a flute that he hoped to play in the London orchestras, Peter applied charm and good sense to make the most of himself. Many in the music industry owe him their careers. In a haughty business, he was unusually considerate of subordinates.
There will be a private funeral on Friday. 

Peter Andry, head of EMI Classics for many years and founder of Warner Classics, has died in a London hospice, around the corner from his much-loved Abbey Road studios. He was 83 and had been suffering from cancer.

(Cover shows Andry with Rostropovich, Richter, Karajan, Oistrakh, at the turbulent recording session of Beethoven’s triple concerto. Photo: Siegfried Lauterwasser)
After Walter Legge’s departure in 1963, Peter pulled EMI Classics together and kept it in profit for quarter of a century by a policy that he described to me, tongue in cheek, as ‘balancing God and Mammon’. God was the conductor Herbert von Karajan whom he pursued with an open chequebook until the mogul returned to his home label. Mammon was Andre Previn who, endowed with a Beatles mop-top and Hollywood wives, sold mountains of LPs to the Christmas market. 
When in 1988 the EMI board, chaired by Colin Southgate, brought in an American axeman, Jim Fifield, Peter saw the writing on the wall and took early retirement. ‘Fifield never got rid of me,’ he was prone to say, ‘he just never got back to me.’
Barely had the ink dried on Peter’s farewell cards than he set up office in Baker Street, across the road from the EMI, as head of Warner Classics, a comoany he formed by acquiring small and medium-sized labels in France, Germany, Finland and the US. 
Twice a year, he would invite me to lunch at Baker Street, cooked in-house and served by a butler. The moment the door shut, we would remove our jackets and, for a happy hour, be as indiscreet as we possibly could about the entire classical panoply, trusting that not a word would ever leave the room. Nor did it. He was more guarded, though no less helpful, when I asked for leads while researching my history of classical recording.
In his last years we saw each other at concerts and, from time to time, at some musical charity or other to which Peter would lend his name. He was – with the likes of Joan Sutherland, Barry Humphries, Germaine Greer, Peter Porter and Rolf Harris – part of a golden generation of gifted Australians who enriched British life and world culture. As a musician who arrived with a flute that he hoped to play in the London orchestras, Peter applied charm and good sense to make the most of himself. Many in the music industry owe him their careers. In a haughty business, he was unusually considerate of subordinates.
There will be a private funeral on Friday. 

In the current issue of The Strad, I look at the ways that the cults of sex and celebrity have distorted the values of violin stardom.

Here’s a sampler:
The only column I ever had pulled from a newspaper for fear of criminal
libel was my fevered response to EMI’s launch of the Eurasian violinist,
Vanessa-Mae in 1994. The original album cover – it was later airbrushed – showed
a 15 year-old girl in a white see-through swimsuit pouting with a fiddle in the
middle of the sea. Given her tender age and the mature male profile of classical
record buyers, this strayed so far off the moral compass that my reasoned
analysis proved legally unprintable.

 

The Violin Player sold 3.5 million copies and made Vanessa-Mae a
household name, at least for the Warholian 15 minutes of fame. Then music hit
back. Her follow-ups flopped. She signed with Sony and was apparently dropped.
Every year since 2006, she has promised an opera-themed album, still awaited.
The best that can be said of Vanessa-Mae is that she played the best she could.  


The rest you’ll have to read in the magazine. By way of a further taster, though, you might enjoy the contender below in the Mendelssohn concerto on youtube.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICp-1YLKegM



Do not hesitate to post your reactions.


In the current issue of The Strad, I look at the ways that the cults of sex and celebrity have distorted the values of violin stardom.

Here’s a sampler:
The only column I ever had pulled from a newspaper for fear of criminal
libel was my fevered response to EMI’s launch of the Eurasian violinist,
Vanessa-Mae in 1994. The original album cover – it was later airbrushed – showed
a 15 year-old girl in a white see-through swimsuit pouting with a fiddle in the
middle of the sea. Given her tender age and the mature male profile of classical
record buyers, this strayed so far off the moral compass that my reasoned
analysis proved legally unprintable.

 

The Violin Player sold 3.5 million copies and made Vanessa-Mae a
household name, at least for the Warholian 15 minutes of fame. Then music hit
back. Her follow-ups flopped. She signed with Sony and was apparently dropped.
Every year since 2006, she has promised an opera-themed album, still awaited.
The best that can be said of Vanessa-Mae is that she played the best she could.  


The rest you’ll have to read in the magazine. By way of a further taster, though, you might enjoy the contender below in the Mendelssohn concerto on youtube.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICp-1YLKegM



Do not hesitate to post your reactions.


Arts organisations in Britain’s second city are locked in talks with municipal leaders after plans to cut £3.5 million in cultural funding over the next four years were leaked to the press. Among those who stand to lose most are the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Birmingham Royal Ballet and the roof company that runs the award-winning Symphony Hall. 

Arts companies across Britain are already coping with 15-30 percent cuts in central Arts Council funding. The Birmingham leak launches a second wave of cuts. The official position is that the plan is just one of many options being considered. Privately, councillors are sympathetic to the orchestra, which – through Simon Rattle, Sakari Oramo and Andris Nelsons – has become the city’s hunter-gatherer of international prestige and global business.
But Birmingham has yet to work out whether, like the Royal Navy, it can afford a flagship (or whether it might share one with the French). Hair is being pulled out in clumps today around the country. Local funding is the ultimate lifeline for regional ensembles. Birmingham’s decision is, in many ways, more crucial to the future of British arts down the next decade than anything laid down in Central London.
Here’s hoping that good sense and enlightened self-interest will prevail. 

Arts organisations in Britain’s second city are locked in talks with municipal leaders after plans to cut £3.5 million in cultural funding over the next four years were leaked to the press. Among those who stand to lose most are the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Birmingham Royal Ballet and the roof company that runs the award-winning Symphony Hall. 

Arts companies across Britain are already coping with 15-30 percent cuts in central Arts Council funding. The Birmingham leak launches a second wave of cuts. The official position is that the plan is just one of many options being considered. Privately, councillors are sympathetic to the orchestra, which – through Simon Rattle, Sakari Oramo and Andris Nelsons – has become the city’s hunter-gatherer of international prestige and global business.
But Birmingham has yet to work out whether, like the Royal Navy, it can afford a flagship (or whether it might share one with the French). Hair is being pulled out in clumps today around the country. Local funding is the ultimate lifeline for regional ensembles. Birmingham’s decision is, in many ways, more crucial to the future of British arts down the next decade than anything laid down in Central London.
Here’s hoping that good sense and enlightened self-interest will prevail. 

I have written an op-ed in tomorrow’s Sunday Telegraph supporting the mass Cage Against The Machine movement, which is staging a worldwide performance of 4’33 in an attempt to produce an alternative Christmas number one.

The CATM uprising (www.catm.co.uk) is aimed at X-Factor and Simon Cowell’s manipulation of the public airwaves. My participation was triggered by the award of the 2010 Turner Prize last week to a so-called artwork that had been anticipated by Cage more than 60 years ago and executed by him in 1952. It signalled, for me, the end of conceptual art. 
Read the article here and respond below.

I have written an op-ed in tomorrow’s Sunday Telegraph supporting the mass Cage Against The Machine movement, which is staging a worldwide performance of 4’33 in an attempt to produce an alternative Christmas number one.

The CATM uprising (www.catm.co.uk) is aimed at X-Factor and Simon Cowell’s manipulation of the public airwaves. My participation was triggered by the award of the 2010 Turner Prize last week to a so-called artwork that had been anticipated by Cage more than 60 years ago and executed by him in 1952. It signalled, for me, the end of conceptual art. 
Read the article here and respond below.