Surgery opens next Monday, Nov 9, at 1400 on WNYC Soundcheck, but the website will open for patient registration before the end of this week. Do check the site for details.

A description of the practice can be found here. All musical ailments sensitively treated. If you have any life crises that might be helped by a piece of music, do send us a mail. And please ask friends to take their aches and pains to The Record Doctor.

On Sunday night Nov 8 the Record Doctor, wearing another hat, will be speaking at HIR Riverdale on the elimination of Jewish ritual from modern American literature.

http://www.hir.org/forms_2009/red.pdf

HIR is located at 3700 Henry Hudson Pkwy, Riverdale, NY,10471.

And at 8pm Thursday Nov 5, he’ll be speaking in Detroit: http://www.jccdet.org/bookfair/november5.shtml

Busy week ahead.

Amid the hoopla and hullabaloo of Gustavo Dudamel’s arrival in Los Angeles, few seem to have noticed that he has quietly renewed as music director in Gothenburg, Swden, for the next three years.

The Swedes can never be faulted for discretion. Over the last four years they have enabled the Venezuelan wonderstick to learn his repertoire out of the world’s limelight, working with a band that expects a conductor to push out the envelope every time he steps on the rostrum.

Gothenburg, I have written elsewhere, is top dog among Scandinavian orchestras, a league apart from the Stockholm Phil, where Alan Gilbert toiled for eight dull years. It was led for quarter of a century by Neeme Jarvi and the Dude took over after a nervous interregnum with the Swiss conductor, Mario Venzago.

If Dudamel has hit top spot on i-Tunes with Mahler One this month, that triumph is founded on the grey winter hours he put in among the impassive Swedes. ‘I love the musicians of this orchestra and the work we do together,’ said Dudamel, on signing the contract, ‘you cannot imagine my enthusiasm for continuing to build on what we have achieved.’

Credit for his Gothenburg grounding belongs to Ed Smith, Simon Rattle’s former sidekick in Birmingham. Smith is leaving Gothenburg in the New Year but he will continue to advise the orchestra and its whizz-man in his ever-immaculate way.