Leonard Slatkin has received a hostile letter from Detroit Symphony audience members after observing, in a comment on Mozart’s disputed Sinfonia Concertante for Four Winds, ‘We do not want to confuse you with alternative facts.’

Next day, this came in from offended patrons:

Last night, conductor Slatkin, whom I have always had the utmost respect for, ruined the evening for me and may have dissuaded me from attending any further concerts.

If you were unaware, he began the concert with a monologue (“joke?”) insulting our president by referring to his “alternate facts.” I am sure he thought he was a hit based on the applause and the laughter. However, he could not hear the half of the theater that was not laughing or applauding. He single-handedly insulted and offended half of the audience which paid good money to enjoy the concert.

Slatkin reflects: ‘I have tried all my life to avoid combining music and politics. But perhaps the time has come to begin to speak out more forcefully. I know that the threatened elimination of the NEA as well as privatization of NPR are subjects on which I must voice my opinion.

Our country was created on the principle of free speech. We all have the right to say what we feel, and those who believe otherwise are basically undermining the founding fathers.’

Read his full post here.

UPDATE: Protestor apologises.

A PBS Newshour report.

We hear that Marcelo Alvarez is on a flight home to Italy after failing again to take the stage as Don José in Carmen.

The Argentine tenor pulled out of the first night 15 minutes before curtain-up, and repeated his non-appearance on the third night. The substitute was Rafael Davila, making his Met debut.

No reason given. He’s out of the run.

 

 

This Carmen has been particularly ill-fated.

Sophie Koch was replaced in the title role by Clémentine Margaine, so late in rehearsals that she didn’t even get a c.v. in the programme book. Conductor Dan Ettinger was subbed by fellow-Israeli Asher Fisch.

We don’t know which of these switches caused Alvarez to pull out.

 

The American mezzo Jamie Barton has been awarded the Beverly Sills Prize, worth $50k and a further bump up the Met cast lists. Barton, 35, also holds the Richard Tucker award.

She sings Ježibaba in Dvorak’s Rusalka, which opens tomorrow.