2022
January
25
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 25, 2022
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At age 9, Marin Alsop told her violin teacher that she wanted to become a conductor. The tutor’s response? “Girls can’t do that.” The New Yorker wasn’t deterred.

“This passion is so strong that it drove her through all of these setbacks and made her persevere,” says Bernadette Wegenstein, director of “The Conductor,” a documentary opening Friday about how Ms. Alsop became the first woman to lead a major U.S. orchestra. 

This year, others are following her path. When the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra begins its 2022-2023 season, Nathalie Stutzmann from France will become the second woman to lead one of the U.S. majors. In Italy, Ukrainian-born Oksana Lyniv has been appointed director of the Teatro Comunale di Bologna. Finnish conductor Susanna Mälkki is reportedly a contender for the New York Philharmonic. 

Grassroots groups, including the Taki Alsop Conducting Fellowship co-founded by Ms. Alsop, are helping women and musicians of color ascend the ranks of smaller orchestras. Progress also stems from changing perceptions about those brandishing batons.

“Traditionally seen as some kind of all-knowing, divine, mysterious, musical genius who was never questioned but always revered, conductors are now seen as, well … human,” writes Cynthia Johnston Turner, dean of the music faculty at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ontario, via email. “We long for the day when we are just the ‘conductor’ and not the ‘female conductor.’”

“The Conductor” chronicles how Ms. Alsop’s groundbreaking appointment at the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in 2005 led to a revolt by its musicians. She gracefully won them over. Now at Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, Ms. Alsop continues to disprove the myth that only masculine traits are suitable for helming an ensemble from the prow of the stage. 

“She shows that you don’t have to be this kind of personality in order for others to follow you,” says Ms. Wegenstein. “They follow you because they feel your art and they want to connect with you.”


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At a U.N. World Food Program distribution site in Pul-e-Alam, Afghanistan, south of Kabul, staff check Afghans' food ration cards on Jan. 17, 2022. Warning that 23 million Afghans are on the verge of famine, the U.N. has made an emergency multibillion-dollar appeal to feed the hungry and forestall further economic collapse.
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U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland tours ancient dwellings during a visit to Bears Ears National Monument near Blanding, Utah, April 8, 2021. Bears Ears was one of three monuments downsized by former President Donald Trump but restored to original size by President Joe Biden.
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Kevin Day’s recent compositions include String Quartet No. 5, commissioned by the Boston-based Sheffield Chamber Players for a program planned for Jan. 27. “It’s a piece about where I’m now currently as a composer, where I am as a person, dealing with self-discovery, self-love, self-worth,” he says.

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Italian Premier Mario Draghi holds a press conference in Rome Jan. 10.

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Couples dance across the newly refurbished dance floor of the Tower Ballroom in Blackpool, England, on Jan. 25, 2022. The renovation included removing 100 layers of varnish from the floor.
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A look ahead

Thanks for reading today’s stories. Do share your favorite pieces with others by clicking the share button on the top right corner of each story. And join us again tomorrow for a look at how empty churches are being repurposed into everything from skate parks to community centers. 
 

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