Angela Hewitt a Milano

Bachiana e Canadese: abbastanza perchè la critica unanime dichiari di aver trovato il nuovo Gould:

“Angela Hewitt continues to captivate and charm audiences around the world with her musicianship and virtuosity. Since her triumph in the 1985 Toronto International Bach Piano Competition, and her subsequent Bach recording for DGG, Miss Hewitt has been hailed as ‘one of the outstanding Bach pianists of our time’ (The Sunday Times, London, 1997). Prior to her Toronto Bach Competition victory, she was placed First in Italy’s Viotti Competition (1978) and was a top prizewinner in the International Bach competitions of Leipzig and Washington DC, as well as the Schumann Competition in Zwickau, the Casadesus Competition in Cleveland, and the Dino Ciani Competition at la Scala, Milan.”



Angela Hewitt sarà al Conservatorio di Milano Sabato sera con questo programma:

L.COUPERIN

Pièces de Clavecin : Sixième Ordre

J.S.BACH

Suite inglese VI in re min. B.W.V. 811

M.RAVEL

Miroirs

E.GRANADOS

Goyescas : La Maya y el ruiseñor – El Pelele

Ebe e Amedeo hanno un altro impegno per Sabato, per cui ho a disposizione due ingressi per i due blogger che si faranno avanti.

Paracadutini

Parlavo a cena ieri sera con un amico di ricordi paralleli: da piccoli andavamo in vacanza a Milano Marittima. Ci è venuto in mente l’aereo con lo striscione che sorvolava la spiaggia e gettava gadgets sui bagnanti. Noi bambini correvamo in acqua a prenderli, mentre i paracadutini scendevano lentamente, facendo molta attenzione a non essere travolti da adulti inferociti che si gettavano sgomitando e ci avrebbero certamente travolto se non ci scansavamo.

La domanda a cui ieri non siamo stati capaci di rispondere è: ma cosa diavolo c’era attaccato ai paracadute? Cos’erano quei preziosissimi gadgets? C’è qualcuno che se lo ricorda?

Dei numeri e della loro interpretazione

Leggevo da Carlo un interessante dibbattito sulla crescita del GDP americana e mi chiedevo come si conciliasse con le nere previsioni del Guardian di cui ti parlavo l’altro giorno. Ebbene, Dave Pollard la vede così:

WHAT THE ECONOMISTS TOLD YOU

WHAT THEY DIDN’T TELL YOU

“The GDP rose 7.2% mainly on the strength of a 6% annualized rise in consumer spending”

That means consumer costs, mostly reflected in the leaping cost of home purchases, are growing at a 6% annual rate. Most of those costs are fixed, non-discretionary costs like mortgage, transportation and health, which have increased 3-to-10 fold in a generation while spending on food, clothing, recreation and furniture has plummeted in that time, because there’s just no money left over. Since incomes are not growing at all, this means consumer debt is rising yet again, and if interest rates spike the consumer is toast. And if you need a reality check, consumer spending dropped in September, showing that consumers are tapped out.

“Profits are soaring”

The reports indicate that this has occurred almost entirely by cost reductions, not increased sales. The primary means of cost reduction have been layoffs, exporting (“offshoring”) jobs, contracting out, and downsizing. In other words, profits are soaring on the backs of American workers.

“The risk of deflation is largely forgotten now”

When people are forced to spend more than they can afford on the above-noted non-discretionary items, and incur record levels of personal debt, the risk is inflation.

A sudden spike in inflation would crush already over-burdened consumers, put the economy in free-fall, accelerate the collapse of the US dollar, and prick the housing bubble. The only significant asset most Americans have, the family home, would then lose much of its value, and foreclosures would soar. And economists do expect rates to rise soon.

“Unemployment has leveled off”

Half a million Americans a month are giving up looking for work every month. In more ways than one, they don’t count in the economists’ numbers.
“Employment will have to rise to keep pace”

There is every reason to believe that net new employment by large corporations will almost all be in India, China, and other third-world countries. Hiring overseas not only reduces costs, it puts money in the pockets of consumers in those countries who are more likely to spend it on the crap these companies produce (most of which is now manufactured in these countries anyways) than debt-ridden Americans would be.

Alcune affermazioni di Pollard mi sembrano discutibili: it’s more complicated than that. Ma come sempre, è il contesto che fa la differenza.

Gil Shaham a Milano

Lunedì prossimo al Conservatorio suonerà Gil Shaham, accompagnato da Akira Eguchi, con il seguente programma “di sicuro successo”:

J. S. BACH

Partita II in re min. B.W.V. 1004

L. van BEETHOVEN

Sonata per violino e pianoforte in fa maggiore op.24 “Primavera”

G. FAURE’

Berceuse op.16

Morceau de lecture à vue

Pélleas et Mélisande : Fileuse

Sicilienne op.78

Sonata n.1 per vl.e pf. in la magg. op.13

Shaham è un altro prodotto della Julliard School (dove ha studiato l’attore Robin Williams, tra i tanti) che viene a esibirsi a Milano. Ha già una solida fama e ha già inciso qualcosa. Suona lo Stradivari “Contessa Polignac” del 1699, appartenuto a David Oistrakh.

Parlando del suo strumento, dice:

“Ho sempre pensato a me stesso come a un violinista ‘del Gesù’. Ma poi ho trovato questo violino. Penso sia lo Stradivari più potente su cui abbia mai suonato, perchè sopporta tutto…

…dopo cinque anni sento che comincio a imparare a suonarlo.”

Il violino gli era stato dato in prestito dai celebri liutai Bein & Fushi, da cui poi l’ha acquistato.