Within a week of endorsing One World’s Song for Palestine, the British rock group have dropped the link from their facebook page.

No explanation has been given.

We have no way of knowing whether they’ve changed their politics, their financial advisors or their friends. Maybe they just listened a second time and realised what a poor song it is. Or maybe Gwyneth Paltrow had something to say about it to Chris Martin. Who knows?

Classical Music magazine has a lovely story about a statue of Chopin that came in from the cold.

Presented to London’s South Bank Centre by the Polish nation in 1975 as a memorial to 250 Poles who fought in the British forces during the Second World War, the statue got moved about a lot and was eventually listed as lost. It has now turned up in a storage cupboard and gone on display. Nice, eh?

photo: rhingeold.co.uk
Things often got lost on the South Bank, including at least one Steinway grand piano that was walked out by burglars through the artists entrance without the security man batting an eyelid. The one case that has never been solved is how the Soviet spy George Blake was smuggled out of the country after escaping from Wandsworth Prison in 1966, supposedly in a harp case that belonged to an East German orchestra that was playing on the South Bank.
Police came swarming all over the Royal Festival Hall, demanding if a harp case had gone missing. ‘Could be,’ said the distracted staff, ‘so much else has.’
They then asked for a harp case to put be on stage so that a Blake-sized policeman could test if he fitted in it. He did. The case was never solved.
Do let me know if you have further information. There might even be a reward in it.

I’ve long had a soft spot for Ilya Repin (1844-1930), a proficient, prolific but by no means revolutionary Russian painter who depicted many of the  great musicians of his century, along with historic reconstructions and social imagery. Good, but not great.

Today, someone paid £4.5 million ($7.2 million) at Christie’s for A Parisian Cafe by Repin.

Makes sense? Only if you’re an oligarch. (Picture courtesy of Christie’s, not the new owner, who is – I hope – unknown to me)

There’s been an awful lot of could-she?, would-she? speculation in classical corridors these past weeks.

Time was running out on Anna Netrebko’s deal with Deutsche Grammophon and some were wondering if she was listening to other offers.

As if.

Treb’s management company is owned by Universal, which owns DG. Where else was she going?

She reupped today, ‘this versatile, beloved star’ (see press release below). Maybe she can now afford some underpinnings.

photo: bild.de. all rights reserved.

Anyhow, all can now live happily ever after that widely-syndicated wardrobe malfunction.

Well, maybe not all. I hear one of the heads at DG sleeps far from secure on the pillow he shares with another DG exec. More another time.

Here’s the official story:
Anna Netrebko Signs New Recording Agreement with Deutsche Grammophon

This New, Long-term, Pact Features Both Audio and Video Recordings

Hamburg, 6 June 2011 – Deutsche Grammophon has signed a new exclusive recording agreement with Anna Netrebko, “diva assoluta del mondo” (Opera News) — extending their relationship for many new album and audio-visual productions.

 

This versatile, beloved star — whose wildly popular and critically acclaimed Deutsche Grammophon discography includes, among other treasures, Verdi’s Violetta and Mozart’s Susanna at the Salzburg Festival; French, Italian, and Czech arias with Gianandrea Noseda; Italian arias with Claudio Abbado; as well as arias and songs from her Russian homeland with Valery Gergiev and Daniel Barenboim — continues to score one triumph after another.

 

With Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater, her recent Deutsche Grammophon album — and her first venture into pre-Classical repertoire — “Anna Netrebko gives one of her finest performances,” declared Gramophone. And in her just-released DVD and Blu-ray of Don Pasquale from the Metropolitan Opera, her Norina — the role that has made her “not just a Met star, but the Met star” (New York Observer) – was hailed by Variety as “one of the great comic performances . . .”

 

Her most recent operatic conquest is Donizetti’s Anna Bolena at the Vienna State Opera, a demanding role that she will bring to the Met in autumn. Reviewing her performance, The New York Times wrote: “Netrebko’s characteristically pure, beautifully formed, resonant tones are heard to ravishing effect, and the music is invested with thoughtful phrasing.”

 

Michael Lang, Deutsche Grammophon’s President, said: “Our long-term partnership with Anna has created the most inspired, beautiful, and artistic recordings. We are thrilled to continue this tradition with such a superb artist.”

 

On signing the new agreement, Anna Netrebko added: “I am happy to continue my collaboration at Deutsche Grammophon — it’s one of the most rewarding experiences in my career. We have many exciting new ideas — that I look forward to begin recording. Thank you, DG! Here’s to many more years together.”