Critiquing the CriticsWho's your favorite critic?
#1
Posted 10 July 2008 - 06:12 PM
Who are your favorites? Who are the prominent critics that we should be heeding today?
#2
Posted 10 July 2008 - 10:16 PM
For classical music I used to find myself in agreement with Anne Midgette, who has happily moved to from the New York Times to the Washington Post where she is their chief music critic.
[And whatever critics we like, we should all remember to regularly click onto their reviews, so that they get good internet traffic marks with their publishers.]
#3
Posted 11 July 2008 - 04:49 AM
Quiggin, on Jul 11 2008, 02:16 AM, said:
#4
Posted 11 July 2008 - 11:55 AM
Quiggin, on Jul 11 2008, 02:16 AM, said:
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Is it the total outlandishness and outrageous decadence of such a remark that makes it somehow endearing? Thanks for reporting it, though. I think this kind of remark should be the province of the artist like Balanchine or Beckett themselves, not because it's any more true when they say it, but it still seems like an 'earned irresponsible flourish'; whereas when a critic says it, it just sounds to me like the most preposterous and pretentious posturing one could hope to never hear. Because it is grounded in absolutely nothing of substance, and reminds me of once looking through a Judith Krantz novel and seeing the sentence 'Jews are like Paris'. My girlfriend at the time and I howled over that one, got a lot of mileage out of it. Macauley's 'cute remark' is on no higher level--senile. It is interesting to me that certain arts critics get to the point when their idea of daring is to see what the most jaded possible thing is they can possibly manage to float. But I'd never take anything of Macauley's seriously again after hearing such tripe. That remark qualifies as the single silliest remark I've ever heard a critic make--it is as if he were channelling Oscar Wilde--and even makes me long for the halcyon days when the Queenan article was still fresh--two long days ago. Queenan almost seems green and just got off the bus by comparison.
Oh well, Ada Louise Huxtable has always been worthwhile.
#5
Posted 11 July 2008 - 03:10 PM
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I must apologize for my haste in quoting Mr. Macaulay without double fact checking--and making him sound more decadent and outlandish and absolutist than in fact he was. His whole statement was more limited in reach:
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This was from a review (NYT: 2/9/2008) of Christopher Wheeldon's "Rococo Variations," in which Macaulay was faulting Wheeldon for his slow ear for variation form, and for his lack of a sense of interesting dance theater. The Balanchine pieces he was comparing "Rococo" to were "Divertimento from 'La Baiser'" and "Stars and Stripes," which were on the same program.
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#6
Posted 16 July 2008 - 10:20 AM
#7
Posted 16 July 2008 - 03:49 PM
Quiggin, on Jul 11 2008, 07:10 PM, said:
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I must apologize for my haste in quoting Mr. Macaulay without double fact checking--and making him sound more decadent and outlandish and absolutist than in fact he was. His whole statement was more limited in reach:
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Well so much for Richard Strauss.
Among others ..
#8
Posted 16 July 2008 - 05:32 PM
zerbinetta, on Jul 16 2008, 11:49 PM, said:
Quiggin, on Jul 11 2008, 07:10 PM, said:
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I must apologize for my haste in quoting Mr. Macaulay without double fact checking--and making him sound more decadent and outlandish and absolutist than in fact he was. His whole statement was more limited in reach:
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Statements like that aren’t criticism, they’re attention-getting devices. In a daily review aimed at the general public, I’ll excuse it.
#9
Posted 16 July 2008 - 05:52 PM
dirac, on Jul 16 2008, 09:32 PM, said:
zerbinetta, on Jul 16 2008, 11:49 PM, said:
Quiggin, on Jul 11 2008, 07:10 PM, said:
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I must apologize for my haste in quoting Mr. Macaulay without double fact checking--and making him sound more decadent and outlandish and absolutist than in fact he was. His whole statement was more limited in reach:
Quote
Statements like that aren’t criticism, they’re attention-getting devices. In a daily review aimed at the general public, I’ll excuse it.
#10
Posted 17 July 2008 - 04:51 AM
#11
Posted 23 July 2008 - 04:05 PM
As for (classical) music critics, I pay attention to Mortimer H. Frank and Michael Ullman as scouts to rewarding recordings available today (Do I contradict myself? Very well, I contradict myself...), but no one I know of working today really compares with Bernard Haggin.
#12
Posted 25 March 2010 - 01:25 PM
“Being a critic is a very good education,” says Macaulay. “You are learning all the time. That is the most interesting thing about the job. If it stopped being an education, I would move on to something else."
#13
Posted 25 March 2010 - 02:03 PM
#14
Posted 25 March 2010 - 03:02 PM
I've started a new thread based on one aspect of the article: the question of how far a critic can or should go in writing negatively about a dancer.
http://ballettalk.in...mp;#entry265562
For all other aspects of toeprints' original topic, please keep posting on this thread. There's still LOTS to say.
#15
Posted 26 March 2010 - 12:23 PM
There was a performance where a very important visiting ballerina fell and none of the critics, at that performance, mentioned it. I would hope that if it had been a member of the corps who had fallen the critics' restraint would have been the same.
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