T Minus 3 and Counting

Okay, I’ll admit it. I’m excited. Very excited. Why? Because it’s just four days until Space Center Houston hosts its NASA Homeschool Day (October 16). I’ll be giving workshops on creating Space music for films as well as talks on “Music and Space” and “Astronomy … Read more

Music and Space

I’m headed for the Johnson Space Center in Houston this week to deliver a series of talks and workshops on Music and Space. Because, as you already know, music is connected to everything. My main talk “Music and Space” explores those connections. Most of us have never … Read more

What’s Wrong with Composer Biographies?

What do you expect in a Music History course? Perhaps you don’t have any particular expectation, but it’s something that I think about a lot. When I meet people who say they are studying music history, I ask what they mean by that. Usually, they … Read more

The Garden Party: Václav Havel

I just returned from seeing an eclectic, riveting, and marvelously absurd production of Václav Havel’s satire “The Garden Party” at the Estates Theater in Prague (the theater where Mozart conducted the premiere of “Don Giovanni”). Havel was a terrific playwright, a voice of Czech dissidence, … Read more

Aivazovsky Seascapes

A Crimean-born Armenian, Ivan Aivazovsky was raised largely in Poland and then studied art in St. Petersburg. He loved travel, found solid success, and enjoyed commissions from Russian aristocrats and highly placed officials as far away as Istanbul. Late in life he painted the oppressions … Read more

Opening the Door to Russian Art

If you are looking for a place to start getting to know Russian art, here are five suggested paintings. People frequently tell me they want to get to know art or music, but they just don’t know the best place to start. Well, there really … Read more

Paintings by Konstantin Makovsky

As I began to write this post about the paintings of Konstantin Makovsky (1839-1915), a friend called to tell me about today’s catastrophe in the Moscow Metro. This is a line I easily could have been on this morning. It’s the line my Russian friend … Read more

Moscow Has Changed

It’s not a Moscow I recognize any more. When I first came to the Soviet Union in 1981, the grey, quiet streets of Moscow moved at an Adagio, with a formality that bespoke centuries of burden. The sufferings of the Second World still reflected in … Read more