PLEASE HELP THE EAR. IF YOU LIKE A CERTAIN BLOG POST, SPREAD THE WORD. FORWARD A LINK TO IT OR, SHARE IT or TAG IT (not just “Like” it) ON FACEBOOK. Performers can use the extra exposure to draw potential audience members to an event. And you might even attract new readers and subscribers to the blog.
By Jacob Stockinger
In late January of this year, Jess Anderson (below) — a longtime friend, devoted musician and respected music critic – died at 85.
The Ear promised then that when more was known or written, it would be posted on this blog.
That time has come.
Jess was a polymath, a Renaissance Man, as the comments below attest to time and again.
For the past several years, he suffered from advancing dementia and moved from his home of 56 years to an assisted living facility. He had contracted COVID-19, but died from a severe fall from which he never regained consciousness.
Jess did not write his own obituary and he had no family member to do it. So a close friend – Ed Wegert (below) – invited several of the people who knew Jess and worked with him, to co-author a collaborative obituary. We are all grateful to Ed for the effort the obituary took and for his caring for Jess in his final years.
In addition, the obituary has some wonderful, not-to-be-overlooked photos of Jess young and old, at home, with friends, sitting at the piano and at his custom-built harpsichord.
It appears in the March issue of Our Lives, a free statewide LGBTQ magazine that is distributed through grocery stores and other retail outlets as well as free subscriptions. Here is a link to the magazine’s home webpage for details about it: https://ourliveswisconsin.com.
That Jess was an exceptional and multi-talented person is obvious even from the distinguished names of the accomplished people who contributed to the obituary:
They include:
Chester Biscardi (below), who is an acclaimed prize-winning composer, UW-Madison graduate, composer and teacher of composition at Sarah Lawrence College.
John Harbison (below), the MacArthur “genius grant” recipient and Pulitzer Prize-winning composer who teaches at MIT and co-directs the nearby Token Creek Chamber Music Festival in the summer.
Rose Mary Harbison (below), who attended the UW-Madison with Jess and became a professional performing and teaching violinist who co-directs the Token Creek Chamber Music Festival.
Steve Miller (below), a close friend who became a bookmaker and is now a professor at the University of Alabama.
The Ear, who knew Jess over many decades, was also invited to contribute.
Feel free to leave your own thoughts about and memories of Jess in the comment section.
It also seems a fitting tribute to play the final chorus from The St. John Passion of Johann Sebastian Bach. You can hear it in the YouTube video below. It is, if memory serves me well, the same piece of sublime music that Jess played when he signed off from hosting his Sunday morning early music show for many years on WORT-FM 89.9.
PLEASE HELP THE EAR. IF YOU LIKE A CERTAIN BLOG POST, SPREAD THE WORD. FORWARD A LINK TO IT OR, SHARE IT or TAG IT (not just “Like” it) ON FACEBOOK. Performers can use the extra exposure to draw potential audience members to an event. And you might even attract new readers and subscribers to the blog.
By Jacob Stockinger
Sarah Brailey (below) is worried.
And with good reason.
Chances are good that you have seen the local soprano or heard her sing.
She is the artistic director of the Handel Aria Competition, which she herself won in 2015. (In the YouTube video at the bottom, you can hear Brailey sing the aria “Will the Sun Forget to Streak” from Handel’s oratorio “Solomon,” with the Trinity Baroque Orchestra under conductor Julian Wachner, in the St. Paul Chapel in New York City.)
Brailey is a co-founder of and participant in the monthly free Just Bach concerts here. In addition, while pursuing graduate studies at the UW-Madison, she is a concert artist with a budding international career. For more about her, including a rave review from The New York Times and sample videos, go to: https://sarahbrailey.com
But right now the Wisconsin native is especially concerned about the lasting impact that the Coronavirus pandemic will have on her own career as well as on the careers of others like her and on the well-being of arts presenters.
Brailey (below, in photo by Miranda Loud) sent The Ear the following essay:
By Sarah Brailey
This is a scary time for everyone, but particularly for anyone who works as an independent contractor.
I am a freelance classical soprano based in Madison. I maintain a very active performing career, traveling all over the globe, and I am also a doctoral student at the UW-Madison Mead Witter School of Music.
When COVID-19 hit the United States, presenting organizations on the east and west coasts started canceling concerts to comply with social distancing recommendations.
I initially thought I was lucky to be living in the middle of the country where our lesser population density might save us. Plus, I am a Teaching Assistant at the UW right now, so I will still be getting my stipend — although teaching virtual voice lessons will be its own special challenge!
But many of my colleagues are not so lucky and are facing bankruptcy. If the government doesn’t include independent contractors in its relief packages, a lot of people are going to be insolvent.
And I myself am not immune. As the seriousness of the situation became clear, all my concerts in the next two months soon disappeared one by one.
While not being able to perform is emotionally devastating, these cancellations are also financially devastating.
There exists a clause in every standard performance contract called “force majeure” (superior force), which is idiomatically referred to as, “an act of God.” This clause excuses a party from not honoring its contractual obligations that becomes impossible or impracticable, due to an event or effect that the parties could not have anticipated or controlled.
This can come in handy for a presenter if there is, say, a blizzard that necessitates the cancellation of a concert. (This happened to me a few seasons ago with the Boston Symphony.) If the presenter will not make any money on ticket sales, they are not then further injured by having to pay the musicians for the canceled concert. (Below, Brailey sings Samuel Barber’s “Knoxville: Summer of 1915” with the Colorado Symphony.)
The ramifications of this pandemic are unprecedented. Every freelance musician I know is suddenly out of work. The current conventions put all of the upfront financial burden on the artists. We are paid in one lump sum at the end of a project. We do not get a fee for the countless hours of preparation.
We often book travel and lodging on our own dime, and are not reimbursed until the end of the gig. We pay for our own health insurance, and we cannot file for unemployment because our work is paid via IRS Form 1099 and not W2s. The abrupt work stoppage caused by this pandemic means insolvency – or even bankruptcy — for many artists. (Below, Brailey sings Handel’s “Messiah” at the famed Trinity Church on Wall Street in New York City.)
Many institutions — and, unfortunately, many of the bigger players like The Metropolitan Opera — are invoking force majeure without much regard for how their artists are struggling.
My colleague, tenor Zach Finkelstein, is covering this in great detail on his blog The Middle Class Artist, as is Alex Ross, the prize-winning music critic for The New Yorker. Read his piece on force majeure here.
However, there are also thankfully some good stories to tell. The Bach Society of Minnesota reimbursed all my travel expenses and is paying 75 percent of my fee, as is the Lyra Baroque Orchestra.
I am helping Zach keep track of the organizations that are helping their artists in this time of need. (Read about them here. Madison Opera is on the list.)
The arts are not just cultural enrichment; they are an essential part of our economy. In 2017, the industry contributed $877.8 billion, or 4.5 percent, to U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and employed over 5 million workers. We cannot afford to let this industry disappear. I fear that many individual artists and arts organizations will not recover from this. (Below, Brailey sings Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Magnificat” at the Bucknell Bach Festival.)
While we wait out this storm, I implore you to donate to a Madison arts organization. Here is a short list of recommendations along with some national relief funds for artists.
Here is a collaborative obituary for music critic, radio host, performer and gay pioneer Jess Anderson, who died in January at 85
3 Comments
PLEASE HELP THE EAR. IF YOU LIKE A CERTAIN BLOG POST, SPREAD THE WORD. FORWARD A LINK TO IT OR, SHARE IT or TAG IT (not just “Like” it) ON FACEBOOK. Performers can use the extra exposure to draw potential audience members to an event. And you might even attract new readers and subscribers to the blog.
By Jacob Stockinger
In late January of this year, Jess Anderson (below) — a longtime friend, devoted musician and respected music critic – died at 85.
The Ear promised then that when more was known or written, it would be posted on this blog.
That time has come.
Jess was a polymath, a Renaissance Man, as the comments below attest to time and again.
For the past several years, he suffered from advancing dementia and moved from his home of 56 years to an assisted living facility. He had contracted COVID-19, but died from a severe fall from which he never regained consciousness.
Jess did not write his own obituary and he had no family member to do it. So a close friend – Ed Wegert (below) – invited several of the people who knew Jess and worked with him, to co-author a collaborative obituary. We are all grateful to Ed for the effort the obituary took and for his caring for Jess in his final years.
In addition, the obituary has some wonderful, not-to-be-overlooked photos of Jess young and old, at home, with friends, sitting at the piano and at his custom-built harpsichord.
It appears in the March issue of Our Lives, a free statewide LGBTQ magazine that is distributed through grocery stores and other retail outlets as well as free subscriptions. Here is a link to the magazine’s home webpage for details about it: https://ourliveswisconsin.com.
That Jess was an exceptional and multi-talented person is obvious even from the distinguished names of the accomplished people who contributed to the obituary:
They include:
Chester Biscardi (below), who is an acclaimed prize-winning composer, UW-Madison graduate, composer and teacher of composition at Sarah Lawrence College.
John Harbison (below), the MacArthur “genius grant” recipient and Pulitzer Prize-winning composer who teaches at MIT and co-directs the nearby Token Creek Chamber Music Festival in the summer.
Rose Mary Harbison (below), who attended the UW-Madison with Jess and became a professional performing and teaching violinist who co-directs the Token Creek Chamber Music Festival.
Steve Miller (below), a close friend who became a bookmaker and is now a professor at the University of Alabama.
The Ear, who knew Jess over many decades, was also invited to contribute.
Here is a link to the joint obituary in Our Lives magazine, a free LGBTQ periodical that you can find in local grocery store and other retail outlets: https://ourliveswisconsin.com/article/remembering-jess-anderson/?fbclid=IwAR027dzv2YqRUNlYF1cF6JyXnEcQxAwcprPYbtBQCs3rYt0Nu847W_xbjpk
Feel free to leave your own thoughts about and memories of Jess in the comment section.
It also seems a fitting tribute to play the final chorus from The St. John Passion of Johann Sebastian Bach. You can hear it in the YouTube video below. It is, if memory serves me well, the same piece of sublime music that Jess played when he signed off from hosting his Sunday morning early music show for many years on WORT-FM 89.9.
Share this:
Like this:
Tags: #AssistedLiving, #BachDancingandDynamiteSociety, #BaroqueMusic, #BaroqueRecorder, #BlogPost, #BlogPosting, #ChamberMusic, #ChoralMusic, #CoronavirusPandemic, #COVID-19, #CriticallyAcclaimed, #EarlyMusicMovement, #EdWegert, #ElliottCarter, #FacebookPost, #FacebookPosting, #Farley'sHouseofPianos, #FerruccioBusoni, #FrancoisCouperin, #FranzLiszt, #FranzSchubert, #FredericChopin, #GayLiberationFront, #GeniusGrant, #GroceryStore, #GunnarJohansen, #Hard Work, #HardWork, #HomeWebpage, #HornSection, #IgorKipnis, #IgorStravinsky, #IsthmusNewspaper, #JacobStockinger, #JessAnderson, #JohannesBrahms, #JohannSebastianBach, #LGBTQrights, #LudwigVanBeethoven, #MacArthurFellow, #MacArthurFoundation, #MadisonOpera, #MadisonSymphonyOrchestra, #MassachusettsInstituteofTechnology, #MetropolitanOpera, #MusicCritic, #MusicCriticism, #MusicEducation, #NewYorkCity, #OrchestralMusic, #OurLives, #PerformingArts, #PianoSonata, #Prize-Winning, #ProArteQuartet, #PulitzerPrize, #RadioHost, #RenaissanceMan, #RetailStore, #RonMcCrea, #RoseMaryHarbison, #RudolfKolisch, #SalonPIanoSeries, #SarahLawrenceCollege, #SignOff, #St.JohnPassion, #SteinwayPiano, #SteveMiller, #SundayMorning, #TheEar, #TheGreatGatsby, #TheMet, #TheUW, #TokenCreekChamberMusicFestival, #UniversityofAlabama, #UniversityofIllinois-Champaign-Urbana, #UniversityofWisconsin-Madison, #VocalMusic, #WisconsinUnionTheater, #WorldPremiere, #WORT-FM89.9, #YouTubevideo, acclaimed, advance, aesthete, Africa, African, airplanes, Arts, assisted living, attend, audience, Bach, Bach Dancing and Dynamite Society, Baroque, beauty, Beethoven, birthday, blog, Book, bookmaker, Brahms, Broadcast, Buscardi, Busoni, camping, Carter, CDs, Chamber music, Chinatown, Chopin, choral music, citizen, Classical music, co-direct, co-director, collaborate, collaborative, comment, Compact Disc, composer, Composition, computer, Concert, conductor, contract, contractor, contribute, coronavirus, coronavirus pandemic, counterpoint, Couperin, criticism, death, decade, dementia, details, devoted, died, Early music, earlymusic, Ed Wegert, effort, Elliott Carter, exceptional, exuberance, Facebook, Facebook post, Facebook posting, facility, fall, Family, Farley's House of Pianos, Ferruccio Busoni, final, fitting, forward, François Couperin, Franz Liszt, Franz Schubert, Frédéric Chopin, free, French, friend, gay, Gay Liberation Front, generosity, genius grant, grateful, graudate, graudate student, grocery store, Gunnar Johansen, Harbison, harpsichord, History, hobby, Home, home webpage, host, Igor Kipnis, Igor Stravinsky, ILLINOIS, imitate, inspiration, invite, Isthmus, it, Jacob Stockinger, January, Jess Anderson, Johann Sebastian Bach, Johannes Brahms, John Harbison, joint, Kipnis, knew, know, knowledge, language, late, LGBT, LGBTQ, lifeblood, like, link, Liszt, literature, Love, Ludwig van Beethoven, MacArthur Fellow, MacArthur Foundation, Madison, Madison Opera, Madison Symphony Orchestra, magazine, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, McCrea, memories, memory, men, mentor, Met, Metropolitan Opera, Midwest, miller, MIT, model, morning, Music, music critic, Music education, Musician, nearby, New York City, obituary, opera, opinionated, Orchestra, orchestral music, Our LIves, outlet, outspoken, overlooked, pandemic, Passion, perform, Performing arts, periodical, photography, photos, Pianist, Piano, Piano sonata, piece, pioneer, play, poet, Poetry, polymath, post, posting, Pro Arte Quartet, professional, professor, programmer, Pulitzer Prize, rdio, recital, recorder, Renaissance, Renaissance man, repertoire, repertory, Retail, Ron McCrea, Rose Mary Harbison, Rudolf Kolisch, Russian, Salon Piano Series, Sarah Lawrence College, school, Schubert, Seattle, section, sign-off, Slavic, Sonata, Soulima Stravinsky, spirit, St. John Passion, statewide, Steinway, Steve Miller, store, Stravinsky, Student, sublime, submarine, subscription, success, suffer, suffering, summer, Sunday, tag, talent, talented, taste, Teacher, technology, The Ear, The Great Gatsby, thought, time, Token Creek, Token Creek Chamber Music Festival, train, tribute, United States, universal, University of Alabama, University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Music, University of Wisconsin–Madison, UW, UW-Madison, Violin, violinist, virtuoso, vocal music, Wegert, Wisconsin, Wisconsin Union Theater, wonderful, world premiere, World War II, WORT-FM 89.9, WWII, year, young, YouTube