Sound Art, COVID, and the First Mediterranean Conference on Music and Science With COVID raging on both sides of the Atlantic, scholars and musicians are finding ways to continue their activities. ZOOM has become an indispensable tool for our work, whether in the classroom, the e-concert hall, or its use in professional conferences. Ferrer-Molina At the end of November 2020, organized by Fundació Assemblea de Ciutadans i Ciutadanes del Mediterrani (FACM), a group of scholars and artists in both music and the sciences gathered via Zoom to present their work under the aegis of the I Congrès Mediterrani Música I Ciència. One of the highlights of the conference was the intervention of Ferrer-Molina with a sound installation titled CONCIERTO PARA TRENES DE METRO Y BANDA, which includes an intervention in the Alameda train station in Valencia (Spain) for fifty-two players within the “natural” environment of train sounds. Ferrer-Molina has participated in many events at the Foundation for Iberian Music, including the 2017 Sound Art Festival with Miguel Álvarez-Fernández, Isaac Diego García and others. Miguel Álvarez-Fernández Álvarez-Fernández and Ferrer-Molina were also guests at the CUNY Graduate Center’s Composers Forum, to discuss their music. As described by Antoni Pizà, the curator of the event, their creative work inhabits the margins between experimental music and sound art. It explores conceptual art, performance, experimental video, and other possibilities for developing the audience’s relationship with sound. They engage with these questions involving intersections through concert pieces, sound installations, sculptures, curatorial projects and many other manifestations. Moving forward a different kind of musical experience, of special interest was the intervention of guitarist Mirza Redžepagić, which explored some similarities between Bosnian traditional music and flamenco. The two-day event is on two different posts on YouTube corresponding to the first and second sessions. Also, check out the web of the Fundació Assemblea de Ciutadans i Ciutadanes del Mediterrani (FACM). About the conference they state: “The Mediterranean Congress “Music and Science” aims to be an annual event that brings together different personalities of music and science in the Mediterranean area in order to share aspects that year after year have affected the interrelation between music and music. science. In its first edition, on November 27 and 28, 2020, in online format, the central theme of the Mediterranean Congress “Music and Science” is the use of ICT in the Covid scenario, while the pandemic situation has forced the science and music, disciplines that require intense teamwork, to transfer a large part from its work to the internet. Organized by the ACM Foundation in collaboration with Mostra Viva del Mediterrani and the ACM circle of Sarajevo.” In the end, nowadays it all seems to be circling back to COVID and its consequences.
Sonoridad.es | Sound Landscapes in the Iberian Peninsula Sonoridad.es | Sound Landscapes in the Iberian Peninsula La Señorita Blanco Curated by our colleague Daniel Valtueña, Sonoridad.es is a program of artistic residences accompanying the creative process of two artists: Isabel Do Diego [isabeldodiego.com] and La Señorita Blanco [lasenoritablanco.me] during the next two academic courses. Please read the complete information here [kjcc.org]. Isabel Do Diego On Thursday October 29 at 2:30 pm EST we’ll open the project with the round table Sonoridad.es: Listening to the Iberian Landscape [kjcc.org]which will be broadcast live through the KJCC [facebook.com] Facebook page,as well as from the Youtube channel [youtube.com]. Read full information here: Sonoridad.es 1029
A Night at the Movies with Conductor Ángel Gil-Ordoñez Ángel Gil-Ordoñez, who is the conductor of one of the Foundation’s resident ensembles, can easily be characterized in Spanish as a todoterreno, a four-wheel drive who succeeds in traversing the most remote and distant zones of the orchestral landscape. His collaborations with the Foundation have helped present in New York the music of Benet Casablancas, Xavier Montsalvatge, Carlos Surinach, Manuel de Falla, Robert Gerhard, Mauricio Sotelo, Óscar Esplá, Ernesto Halffter, and many more. His latest project includes a survey of the Bernard Herrmann, composer of many soundtracks for Hitchcock, as well as other notable film directors. You can hear Gi-Ordóñez’s performance and commentary here. The recording includes Herrmann’s world premiere recording of Whitman a radio drama on the famous American poet (words by Norman Corwin) and Psycho: A Narrative for String Orchestra mixing words and musical splashes of cinematic color and words. He has tackled the film repertoire in concert and recording in many occasions including Redes, with music by Silvestre Revueltas and cinematography by Paul Strand, and The City with music by Aaron Copland. His, so to speak, ecumenical tastes have also taken him to present Gamelan music and programs dedicated to the musical traditions of Armenia. We are proud of his contribution through two decades to the programs of Foundation for Iberian Music and we hope to be able to continue working together for at least two decades more.
Mark your calendars: Two Talks by K. Meira Goldberg K. Meira Goldberg In line with the Foundation for Iberian Music’s developing Fandango Project, in concordance with the expanding Digital Humanities at the Graduate Center and beyond, Dr. K. Meira Goldberg, Scholar in Residence, will be an invited speaker at two upcoming online public online events focusing on transatlantic circulations of representations of race. On November 6 she will present “Tilting Across the Racial Divide: Jacinto Padilla ‘El Negro Meri’” at the symposium Race and Blackness in the Atlantic World, at the University of Texas, Austin. On December 11 she will participate in a Public lecture/conversation on Race and Peninsular/Transatlantic Studies at El Taller@KJCC (NYU), a working group dedicated to Peninsular Studies that is organized from NYU but with active participation from faculty and students across the graduate Consortium and beyond to include area scholars and students. The Global Reach of the Fandango in Music, Song and Dance – Editors: K. Meira Goldberg, Antoni Pizà
When Barcelona was “absolument moderne”: The Schoenberg / Gerhard Correspondence Shows the Impact of Musical Modernism in Catalonia and Elsewhere Schoenberg’s home in Barcelona Like Paris and Berlin, interwar Barcelona (c.1920-1936) was a cauldron of international modernist creativity: Schoenberg composed Moses und Aron, Webern conducted the Pau Casals Workers’ Orchestra, and Alban Berg premiered his Violin Concerto. This powerful momentum shaped a generation of composers (Robert Gerhard, especially, but also Joaquim Homs, and, later on, Benet Casablancas, who was awarded the 2012 Foundation for Iberian Music’s Composer’s Commission, among others) and inspired the work of a generation of visual artists and literary minds (Antoni Tàpies, Joan Brossa, and J.E. Cirlot, among others). In Barcelona in the thirties, as Rimbaud asserted in a different context: “Il faut être absolument moderne.” In 2006, the Foundation for Iberian Music dedicated a series to “Schoenberg in Barcelona.” The composer’s daughter, Nuria Schoenberg-Nono, unable to attend, send us a kind note that read: As you can well imagine, Barcelona has a special significance for me. During my father’s stay there, he not only gave birth to the second act of his opera Moses und Aron, but my mother gave birth to their first child, a girl to whom my father wanted to give the most popular name in Barcelona: Nuria. I think the fact that he wanted that name for me shows how much he felt at home in that beautiful city. My father’s contract with the Akademie der Künste in Berlin allowed him a six-months’ composing leave, which he spent in warmer cities, since he suffered from asthma and could not endure the cold German winter. Invited by pupil and friend Roberto Gerhard to spend the winter months in Catalonia, my parents prolonged their sojourn until the beginning of June, when my father had to return to Berlin to take up his duties again as Professor of the masterclass in composition. He did not wish to return to Berlin and had asked friends to try and find a music patron who could assure him a salary so he could stay in Barcelona, but to no avail. And it was not only the warm weather which had attracted him, I am sure it was also the warm welcome he had received there by his old and new friends. In the ’80s my daughter and I were invited to attend the premiere of Moses und Aron in Barcelona. I will never forget the superb hospitality shown us and the great impression that the city and its people made on me. I am really sorry that I cannot be with you all to take part in your event. I hope to be able to collaborate with the Foundation in the near future. I think I got carried away thinking about Barcelona. All the best, Nuria The history of the friendship between Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951) and Robert Garhard (1896-1970) dates back to 1923, when the Catalan composer wrote to Schoenberg requesting the possibility of taking composition lessons with him. In his request letter, he included the score of two recent works, Dos apunts (Two Sketches for Piano) and Set Haikus (Seven Haikus for chamber ensemble and voice). After an interview, Schoenberg accepted him as a student; shortly after, Gerhard became his assistant. While in Vienna, Gerhard met his future wife Leopoldina (“Poldi”) Feichtegger and became friends with Berg and Webern. In 1925, Schoenberg took over Busoni’s class at the Preussische Akademie der Künste and Gerhard followed him there as his student and assistant until 1928. Also in 1925 and after an invitation by Gerhard, Schoenberg visited Barcelona to conduct his Pierrot Lunaire. Autograph ms., Klawierstueke, op. 33b, composed in Barcelona Because Berlin’s anti-Semitic atmosphere, during the period 1931-32, Schoenberg and his wife moved to Barcelona as the guests of the Gerhards. There, enjoying its moderate winter weather, Schoenberg composed most of Moses und Aron. That season, Gerhard arranged for Schoenberg and Webern to conduct the Casals Orchestra. In 1936 the 16th ISCM festival was held in Barcelona and Gerhard, organized the premiere of Berg’s Violin Concerto. As a tribute to Barcelona and to Gerhard’s hospitality, the Schoenbergs named their daughter Nuria (a typical Catalan name). She was born in Barcelona in 1932 and married the Italian composer Luigi Nono. A friend and collaborator of Miró, the architect Josep Lluís Sert, and Dalí, Gerhard’s music “displayed an increasingly radical exploratory outlook and until his death contributed energetically to the development of serial and electronic composition, and to timbral and textural innovation” (New Grove). To be sure, Gerhard learned from Schoenberg “clarity and concision of form, intricate contrapuntal working, textural variety and a unified harmonic idiom” (New Grove). Here are some useful, albeit random, dates to understand Schoenberg’s relationship with Barcelona: 1913 Casals performs Schoenberg’s arrangement of the Concerto for Cello by Georg Matthias Monn (1717-50) 1923 Robert Gerhard sends Two Sketches for piano to Schoenberg and becomes his student in Vienna and, later, Berlin 1925 Festival Arnold Schoenberg in Barcelona and other Catalan towns; Pierrot Lunaire, Kammersymphonie, a selection of songs and other compositions are performed 1931 Schoenberg arrives in Barcelona in October. Settles in a modernista sunny house 1932 Writes Moses und Aron and Klavierstück Op. 33b. Nuria Schoenberg (later Nono) is born in Barcelona and is baptized by musicologist and priest Higini Anglès. Anton Webern conducts Verklärtenacht and Acht Lieder Op. 6, among other compositions 1933 Casals and Schoenberg plan future concerts in Barcelona, including an arrangement for cello and orchestra of the Monn keyboard concerto 1936 Alban Berg premieres his Violin Concerto in Barcelona; Erwartung is also performed 1956 Tàpies, Brossa, Cirlot and other members of Dau al Set place a plaque at the Schoenberg’s former residence in Barcelona 1985 The Gran Teatre del Liceu’s premières Moses und Aron To complete the picture of that special moment in music history, just recently, professor Paloma Ortiz-de-Urbina Sobrino has just published an extremely valuable book. Her work—actually several multilingual volumes—contains the complete correspondence between Schoenberg and his student Robert Gerhard (including that of their wives). There are a total of eighty-two letters, postcards, telegrams, and other similar items. Most of them are in German and some in English; but one item is in French and another in Catalan. Professor Ortiz-de-Urbina has transcribed, edited, and translated all the items for one volume into English and for a second volume into Catalan all published by the Biblioteca Nacional de Catalunya. There is also a different edition in German put out by Peter Lang. (In total there are three books.) Professor Ortiz-de-Urbina is a Gerhard specialist, a musicologist, and a polyglot who, without her absolute mastery of all these languages as well as her profound knowledge of the pertinent musicological literature, would not have been able to produce these singularly important volumes. These letters are not only relevant for musicologists interested in Schoenberg and Gerhard’s studies, but also for the general, educated reader who wants to understand—and even enjoy learning about—that special moment when those two creative minds met and spoke frankly in the intimate mode of the missive, closer to the personal diary than to the theoretical treatise. It is clear, additionally, that Schoenberg had a powerful impact on later Catalan artists such as idiosyncratic, multidisciplinary Joan Brosa, painter Antoni Tàpies, and the poet J.E Cirlot, who wrote apropos of Schoenberg’s stay in Barcelona these beautiful lines: Two fragments by J.E. Cirlot I … Era un hombre Lejano. Su triste matemática juntaba Ceniza y pensamientos. J.E. Cirlot, In memoriam II … En tus doce sonidos se levanta Un candelabro nuevo, zodiacal, Vencido el candelabro planetario. Permuta lo que ora, lo que canta, Inspiración del centro cenital, Música del sistema necesario. J.E. Cirlot, Homenaje a Schönberg And just to finish, the following valuable sources, Gerhard’s testimony and an early review, might help us understand Schoenberg’s experience in Barcelona as well as the early reception of his music: Robert Gerhard in a BBC radio interview He [Schoenberg] loved his window…. He had his table right against the window. And he lifted his eyes up from the score Moses and Aron, which, as you know, he finished the second act in Barcelona in that room—this signed at the end “Barcelona, 10th of March, 1932.” When he lifted his eyes from the score, what he saw was that fantastic panorama. It was a smallish room. It had a small upright piano, a table perhaps, a sofa, and a few armchairs and that was all. And Mrs. Schoenberg and my wife sat at the back of the room chatting lustily, you know, with quite without the slightest regard for that man composing there on the window because Schoenberg insisted. He wanted them to talk loud. He hated to hear somebody whispering. I’m sure he listened with a kind of a… with a quarter of his ear, and when something came up that was gossipy, you know, he joined the ladies. He jumped up and joined the ladies and mixed in the conversation. When he had enough, he went back to his table, sat down, and was concentrated the next instant, deeply concentrated, completely oblivious, deaf to the latest conversation. A 1925 Catalan concert review No fue menor la expectación motivada por el anuncio de la sesión que en 29 de abril de 1929 se dedicó a Arnold Schönberg, compositor vienés, de procedimientos atonales ultramodernos, en abierta rebelión contra todo lo establecido, de una originalidad rayana en la extravagancia y cuya música (…) suena en los oídos de los no iniciados como una caótica confusión de ritmos y disonancias, provocando en todos los públicos, sin excluir el de Barcelona, apasionadas discusiones, no siempre mantenidas dentro de los límites de la corrección y el mutuo respeto.
In memoriam Assunta “Sunny” Carballeira (August 23, 1925 – January 20, 2019) music’s grande dame of “old” New York There’s so much talk right now whether NY has lost its bite and how much better it was that “old” NY of times past. And, yes, COVID has changed our city and our cultural habits, but perhaps a better debate would be how long this apparent debacle will last; how long without the Met and the MET, Broadway and off-Broadway, and even off-off-Broadway. Barely a week ago, it would have been the birthday of Assunta “Sunny” Carballeira, pianist, singer, and above all Spanish music’s grande dame of “old” NY. She would have turned 95. Dr. Manuel Carballeira, Alicia de Larrocha, and Sunny Carballeira. Photo by Alicia Torra Born in Queens, NY, the daughter of Italian parents, she married Manuel Carballeira, a prominent doctor of Galician extraction and for fifteen years the Metropolitan Opera’s physician. From an early age she performed in the pioneer and bizarre “all girls” Phil Spitalny Orchestra, and later in the smoky, sultry rooms at the Café Pierre and the Hotel New Yorker. Radio and TV were also part of her artistic outlets and she co-hosted several programs for CBS. Most importantly for many of us, later in life, in addition to her family, she was the port of entry, so to speak, of all Spanish—and especially Catalan—musicians. She hosted in NY essentially all musicians who were engaged to perform or were developing careers here: Andrés Segovia, Carlos Surinach, Montserrat Caballé, Victoria de los Ángeles, José (Josep) Carreras; Juan (Joan) Pons; Plácido Domingo; Jesús López Cobos; Frederic Mompou, Carmen Bravo, Xavier Moltsalvatge, and especially her close friend Alicia de Larrocha. Her home in Queens, NY, her summer place on Long Island, but especially the old Spanish Institute, in Manhattan’s posh Upper East Side, were the sites of numerous receptions, lectures, concerts, and cocktail parties honoring those composers and performers even before they were known to American audiences at large. “I was just on the phone with Victoria [de los Ángeles],” she would mention in passing when speaking with this chronicler. And then, “what are we going to do with José [Carreras]. We need to bring him back to Carnegie!,” she would conclude emphatically. And it’s true, she was highly selective with her friends, but had never forgotten her Italian immigrant roots and those of her kind Galician husband. She attended the exclusive Finch College, a small higher education institution in, again, Manhattan’s exclusive Upper East Side— Nixon’s daughter and Isabella Rosellini, being among the many NY’s luminaries, socialites, and philanthropists who attended the now-defunct school. And also, in the Upper East Side, at our own CUNY Hunter College, she co-organized an eccentric fundraising for the International Piano Library in which, among many other performances, eight pianists (including Arrau, de Larrocha, Borge, and Guiomar Novaes) played simultaneously (“almost in unison,” said tongue-in cheek the prominent critic Harold C. Schonberg) Chopin’s “Heroic” Polonaise. In the last twenty years or so, the Foundation for Iberian Music benefited enormously from Sunny’s rolodex (have we all forgotten that useful, old contraption?) in organizing events honoring the music of Halffter, Montsalvatge, Surinach, Nin-Culmell, Granados, Larrocha, and others, and for that we’re extremely grateful.
For Better or Worse (better, mostly), We Are All Immersed in the Digital Humanities For better or worse, we are all now immersed in the Digital Humanities. Forget the Parisian cafés and the endless conversations, legs crossed, cigarette-holding, cuddling a glass of Pernod with melting ice cubes, current intellectual debates take place in front of screens of all sizes, devices of all makes, smartphones, computers, tablets, and through platforms of immense interactive capabilities. First, there was a budding idea and perhaps a question (what can new technologies do for the traditional arts and humanities?) from which, in the last decade, there has been many responses. It is worth mentioning here, the pioneer role of Barry S. Brook, the founder of the doctoral programs in music at the CUNY Graduate Center. In the 1960s, he saw the enormous possibilities of the application of computers to musical scholarship. Many of his initiatives (see his biography) involved the creation of massive data banks and its availability on digital formats from everywhere in the world. This spirit of making information available to sans frontiers scholars continues to this day to be the lightning rod of the Brook Center and its constituents, including the Foundation for Iberian Music. Think of RILM Abstracts , Ridim, RCMI, Music in Gotham, and the Eighteenth-Century Symphony Archive, just to mention a few of the digital initiatives based at the Brook Center. They all employ the talent, knowledge, and endless energy of CUNY students, researchers, and faculty. The Graduate Center still continues to be at the avantgarde of the digital world, with a program specifically created for the digital humanities. The CUNY Center for the Humanities offers free online access to a diversity of conversations with preeminent thought leaders, and The Dominican Studies Institute at The City College of New York has several wonderful online and freely accessible archives. Just recently, The Graduate Center received a $375,000 NEH for a project headed by professor Matthew K. Gold called “Manifold in the Classroom: Digital Publishing for Open Pedagogy.” One of its results it will be an open-access publishing platform created by CUNY’s GC Digital Lab called Manifold. In the last decades, digital Iberian musical scholarship has given great strides. A few years ago, the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas created a Fondo de Música Tradicional (Traditional Music Holding) an enormous data base. The project is directed by Dr. Emilio Ros-Fábregas, a CUNY alumnus and former faculty member, as well as an early researcher at the Brook Center. In addition, Dr. Ascensión Mazuela-Anguita, one of the main researchers working on the project, was recently also a scholar in residence at the Foundation for Iberian Music. Of course, many music publications have in recent years moved to online platforms. With the Instituto Cervantes Observatorio at Harvard University we published the proceedings of our 2019 Joaquín Rodigo conference. We also published the proceedings of several conferences in Música Oral del Sur, and its editor in chief, Reynaldo Fernández-Manzano has lectured here at the Foundation in several occasions. Another eminent colleague, Walter A. Clack has visited us in many occasions as a lecturer and conference presenter. He is the founder of the e-journal Diagonal an incredible platform for digital publishing based at the Center for Iberian and Latin American Music. Catching up with the new reality of online work, many scholarly societies such as the Renaissance Society of America and the American Society for Theatre Research have modified membership fees, especially for contingent faculty, independent scholars, and graduate students, to a “pay what you can.” And many performing arts organizations, such as Danspace Project offer a blend of performance and community dialogue online. Finally, online digital resources such as the Biblioteca Digital Hispanica from the Biblioteca Nacional de España, Gallica from the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, the Oxford Cantigas de Santa María Database , and of course the New York Public Library are more important than ever to scholars whose travel to archives is limited due to COVID. We at the Foundation for Iberian Music, having created the Fandango Project, a series of conferences and publications that started out in New York but has since branched out to Los Angeles and Veracruz, México, and in 2022 to Africa, are in the initial planning stages of a Digital Fandango Project, an online resource that will connect scholars to scholarship and to each other. Stand by for more news! It is the beginning of a new semester, and we are all struggling with online teaching, COVID19 has propelled us to relearn it effectively. As scholars, we are also impelled to embrace the digital humanities in our own research and its dissemination. The challenges, needless to say, are enormous, but the possibilities are also immense. As humanists, we’re wise to keep a dab of skepticism around all this newness—critical thinking is what we teach our undergraduates, in the end. We, however, would be absolute fools if did not take advantage of this opportunity to partake in the transformation of the humanities in this new digital era. And, as far as of Paris and our longed-for Pernods, as they say, we will always have Paris.
A quiet pond no longer, music scholarship generates controversies A quiet pond no longer, music scholarship generates controversies Heinrich Schenker by Hermann Clemens Kosel – http://www.schenkerdocumentsonline.org/colloquy/heinrich_schenker.html, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=67618750 For many decades, perhaps centuries, what we now call musicology and its sibling disciplines (ethnomusicology, theory and analysis, performance studies, and so forth) were a quiet pond, its waters never stirred, its fish swimming in silence. Then, in the eighties and nineties of the last century, came so-called “new musicology,” cultural studies, performance studies and its many offshoots. All of a sudden, one could discuss race, gender, sexuality, class, and any socially-relevant issues. Some academics were frankly setback by the changes in the discipline; others, needless to say, celebrated the transformations. Traditional historical musicology was charged with focusing excessively on archival transcriptions of European “masters.” Music theory was accused of de-contextualizing musical works: “parallel fifths,” disembodied of its sound, it was pointed out, were the same “error” according to music theory textbooks, whether they were sung by castrati or sounded on a Moog synthesizer. Fast-forward a few decades and music scholars are now focusing on a broad range of issues, many of them causing controversy. A few weeks ago, we posted on the legacy of Iberian music in light of the BLM movement. Months earlier we discussed the beginnings of slavery in 1619 and its connections with the musical practices of Iberian Peninsula. Last year, Meira Goldberg published her Sonidos negros tackling music and dance and the politics of race. Just a week ago, the celebrated Misteri d’Elx / Misterio de Elche (Elx / Elche, Spain) was cancelled because of the COVID19 pandemic. As the oldest drama in Europe, it had been uninterruptedly performed for six hundred years up to last week. And just last week, Antoni Pizà wrote another op-ed piece calling for educating contemporary audiences on the anti-Judaism aspect of parts of the text. Of course, this aspect has been discussed previously by many other scholars such as Greenblatt , Nirenberg , and Pizà, elsewhere. Much more controversial has been a presentation at the Society for Music Theory by our colleague at the CUNY Graduate Center and Hunter College, professor Philip Ewell, in which he directly denounces racism in the field of music theory—who would ever know that parallel fifths could stir the still waters of our quiet pond? Some of his argument involves the study of white supremacist Heinrich Schenker’s methods of musical analysis, but it goes beyond that. His talk and its ensuing controversy have sparked an incredible media coverage (NPR, Fox, etc.) that shows that musical scholarship is no longer a quiet pond.
“Just thinking”—Itamar, a publication from Valencia, thrives on its in-betweenness “Just thinking”—Itamar, a publication from Valencia, thrives on its in-betweenness For those who still don’t know it, Itamar: Revista de Investigación Musical / Territorios para el Arte is a publication based at the Universitat de València. Under its coeditors, Jesús Alcolea Banegas, Rosa Iniesta Masmano, and Rosa Mª Rodríguez Hernández, the publication honors its title and subtitles because it provides a space—a freethinking “palm tree island”—for broadminded thought, a territory where no discipline or methodology dominates; a place that fosters “la pensée complexe,” as one of its honorary founders, the eminent Edgar Morin, could have said. To be sure, Itamar celebrates its “in-betweenness,” as Homi K. Bhabha critical theorist would say, a space between spaces in an imaginary landscape of academic work. You may see it for yourselves in the table of contents of the current issue. Itamar’s latest issue has just come out and, among many other articles, Antoni Pizà publishes a think piece on the possible consolation of music and the arts. Why do some people tend to rely on the arts to find balance in their emotional lives? Pizà has published several other essays in Itamar. In 2009 he wrote about fragments and unfinished artworks and specifically Schubert’s Reliquie, Piano Sonata in C major, D. 840. He also published in 2010 an essay on Chopin’s sexual life, a widely downloaded essay, if only for its title. We are all grateful that Itamar exists and provides a needed editorial space for open-minded scholarship and writerly creativity. We’re all Robinson Crusoe now, sitting on an imaginary Itamar, a deserted palm-tree island, scratching our heads and thinking—just thinking.