The top women conductors are Polish
NewsLa Maestra competition ended in Paris last night with Poles taking the top prizes.
Anna Sulkowska-Migon, 26, from Krakow, came first.
Joanna Natalia Slusarczyk, 36, was second.
La Maestra competition ended in Paris last night with Poles taking the top prizes.
Anna Sulkowska-Migon, 26, from Krakow, came first.
Joanna Natalia Slusarczyk, 36, was second.
The Syracuse Opera Company has filed for bankruptcy,…
A barely recognisable version of Puccini’s last opera…
Fans have uploaded a performance of Schubert’s four-hand…
This is the forbidding Erich Leinsdorf, conducting the…
Session expired
Please log in again. The login page will open in a new tab. After logging in you can close it and return to this page.
Perfectly timed for International Womens Day, of course, but are either of them any good? (i.e. better than Mirga) I hope so…
The greatest women conductors are not the ones who win this “competition” that discriminate half of the world’s population and the majority of the potential competitors, but the ones who take part in competitions open to everyone, make it to the final rounds and win a prize.
Explain yourself
I don’t need to, but here it goes: the merit of those who win this competition is less important than the merit of those who take part and win prizes in non-discriminatory competitions. Why? The pool of potential competitors is bigger and therefore the level in non-discriminatory competitions is higher (more candidates to choose from). I think it is pretty easy to understand.
Vanessa Benelli Mosell is also a top conductor.