A restored manuscript edition of George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue will be given its New York premiere at Lincoln Center's Avery Fisher Hall on January 8. Gershwin's piece was rediscovered by Dr. Alicia Zizzo who explained that the composer's editors "deleted over 50 measures in the piano part. In the ensuing piano solo version, 88 bars were cut from the manuscript." Also on the program are the New York premiere of James Cohn's Variations on the Wayfaring Stranger and the world premiere of Jeffrey Biegel's orchestration of Balakirev's Islamey. ...

According to a report in London's The Independent, conductor John Elliot Gardiner has been released by his label, Deutsche Grammophon. The terms of Gardiner's parting after a two decade relationship with the label were not given, but it was suggested that it might have been caused when the label made a last minute decision not to release all 200 Bach cantatas which Gardiner has been recording over the last year in tribute to the 250th anniversary of the composer's death. Instead of the 60 CD collection, DG will release 12. ...

Punk rock diva Patti Smith returns to Detroit, to host and narrate the PBS special, "Mahler's Beethoven: The Detroit Symphony Orchestra." The 90-minute special features conductor Neeme Jarvi and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra performing Mahler's re-orchestration of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. Smith will narrate the program, which explores the friendship between DSO's former music director Ossip Gabrilowitsch (who died in 1936) and Gustav Mahler, and how the score came to be in DSO's library. Smith has said, "In my house we listen to the big three: Coltrane, Hendrix and Beethoven." The special airs nationally on PBS later this month. ...

Saxophonist Branford Marsalis and the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra will release a CD of predominantly French music for saxophone including works by Ibert, Milhaud and Debussy. This is not the jazz player's first foray into classical. His 1986 Romances for Saxophone included works by Debussy, Villa-Lobos, Satie and Ravel. The album will be released on Sony Classical in March and will be backed up by a tour of the U.S., Japan and Europe. ...

Classical producer Teresa Sterne, whose innovations were chronicled in the recently released Teresa Sterne: A Portrait, has died. From 1965 to 1979, Sterne ran the Nonesuch label. Under her helm, the label began expanding its repertoire by recording the works of 20th century composers including Elliott Carter and George Crumb. In addition, the label took a deeper step into promoting modern music by commissioning new works. When Nonesuch was taken over by Warner Bros. in the 1970's, Sterne was dismissed. She died in her home in Manhattan at the age of 73. ...

Sun and Satie come together for the 18th Annual St. Barts Music Festival. The tropical Caribbean island will play host from January 13–24th to a musical affair featuring musicians and singers from many of the world's most well known companies. Two programs feature the Empire Brass Quintet in music of Ravel, Satie and Mozart. Also included are programs featuring dancers from the American Ballet Theatre, Hamburg Ballet and others. ...

The Toronto Symphony Youth Orchestra kicked off their season Monday (Dec. 11) with composer Jeffrey Ryan's Visions of Joy. The orchestral piece attempts to explore Beethoven's "Ode to Joy" from his Symphony No. 9 as Beethoven himself might have heard the music in his imagination as he was writing it. Ryan, an affiliate composer with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, was commissioned in 1997 by the Windsor Symphony. "As a composer, if you're trying to think about sound, you have to filter other things out," Ryan explains. "This piece reflects the frustration you feel in your head as you attempt to get past other sounds." ...

In a joint interview in the Chicago Tribune, Luciano Pavarotti, Placido Domingo and Jose Carreras — better known as the Three Tenors — said they weren't considering inviting Tuscan tenor Andrea Bocelli to join them. "Why should we?," said Pavarotti, "I think we are already a beautiful crew. We have been together for so many years. Ten years is quite something. I don't think it is necessary." They also said that they enjoy talking about soccer and sex and play cards while on tour. ...

Music Theatre Sydney (Australia) are planning on staging a new opera, based on the life of Australian boxer Les Darcy, who was born in 1895 and had 50 fights before meeting a tragic death at 21. What makes this production unique is that the production design will have the audience sitting around a boxing ring in the theatre. "Darcy himself played the violin and his last match was with a boxer who played the cello," said music director Mark Summerbell. "There was this wonderful scene in the warm-up rooms where they'd finished their preparation and they were sitting there playing to relax themselves." The opera, The Flight of Les Darcy, was composed by Raffaele Marcellino with a libretto by Robert Jarman and will debut next year...

The St. Louis Symphony has received the largest personal contribution ever made to an American orchestra to the tune of $40 million. The money was a gift from Enterprise Rent-A-Car owner Jack Taylor and his family. The $40 million challenge grant is structured with $5 million allocated to operating expenses and the remaining $35 million for increasing the Symphony''s endowment, which is currently about $22 million. The challenge grant will be in effect over a four-year period, with at least a one-for-one matching requirement. The St. Louis Symphony is the second-oldest orchestra in the U.S...

If you're looking for a nice gift this season and don't mind spending $550, you could buy a ticket to tenor Andrea Bocelli's April 6 solo concert at Toronto's Air Canada Centre. The price sets a record in the city, beating previous top dollar star Placido Domingo by $50. Lesser-priced tickets are also available for the show ranging from $85 to $325. The highest ticket price in Toronto's history is still held by the Three Tenors 1997 performance at $2099. ...

Cellist Yo-Yo Ma made an appearance at a Costco discount store in San Francisco on Monday (Dec. 4). Ma, who said he was a Costco member, signed several hundred autographs and talked with throng of fans who were there to meet him. "I really enjoy this," Ma told the San Jose Mercury News. "After a performance, the talk is limited to the complimentary remark, to the 'This is wonderful.' But this is people coming to say something. ... One mother came asking about schools for her 13-year-old-daughter, so we were trading info back and forth." The appearance was arranged by Sony Records to promote his latest album, the soundtrack by Tan Dun for the film "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon." ...

While hundreds of items once belonging to diva Maria Callas garnered $1.25 million in auction over the weekend, perhaps the strangest purchase of all were 13 lots of undergarments worn by the singer, who died 23 years ago. The items, including a black lace slip and pink satin slip, were picked up by the Athenaeum Foundation (sponsors of the Maria Callas opera prize), which stated its intention to burn them out of respect for the artist. "We came to buy Maria Callas' underwear so that we could burn it and cast the ashes into the sea," foundation president Louli Psichuli told Agence France-Presse. "It was unbearable for us, in Greece, to think of Callas' image, which had nothing to do with sex, being exploited so sordidly." ...

Attempting to put an end to ongoing rumors that the 56-year old Dame Kiri Te Kanawa plans to retire from singing in the next few years, her representative told Opera News recently that there is "no plan afoot" for her to retire. "We are actively seeking engagements, and opportunities for her well into 2001 and beyond," Elizabeth Sobol of IMG Artists told the magazine. Te Kanawa, a native of New Zealand, is a member of the Maori tribe. She was given her royal title in 1982, shortly after performing at Prince Charles' wedding. On September 20, she opened the New York Philharmonic season in a live telecast singing Mozart and Strauss arias...

The Library of Congress has acquired an archive of papers of the late Russian-American musicologist/composer Nicolas Slonimsky. The papers include both printed and manuscript music, programs, writings, correspondence, an extensive musicians' biographical file, recordings, and materials collected by Slonimsky throughout his life. Included in the collection are letters to Slonimsky from almost every major composer of the 20th century — from Babbitt to Bernstein — as well as such items as a handwritten score by Charles Ives. Slonimsky died in 1995 at the age of 101...

Luke Dollman, 26, has taken this year's young conductor award from Symphony Australia. Dollman attended the Elder Conservatory at Adelaide University and said he would use the $20,000 prize to further his education at the prestigious Sibelius Academy in Helsinki, Finland...

The first full-length opera by composer David Sawer will have its premiere in April with the English National Opera. The work, From Morning to Midnight, is based on a German expressionist play by George Kaiser and has been under development at the ENO's studio over the past year. Sawer's other works include the orchestral pieces Brynan Wood and Songs of Love and War. In addition to winning the Fulbright Fellowship in composition, Sawer was composer-in-residence with the Bournemouth Orchestra. ...

The Spoleto Festival USA, held annually in Charleston, South Carolina, has announced much of the programming for its 25th anniversary season. Highlights of the festival, which runs from May 25 to June 10, include a new production of Puccini's Manon Lescaut, to be conducted by Spoleto Festival's newly appointed music director of opera and orchestra, Emmanuel Villaume. Chen Shi-Zheng will direct an innovative new production of Purcell's Dido and Aeneas. Other classical performances include Philip Glass with kora virtuoso Foday Musa Suso in The Screens, Villaume conducting the Spoleto Festival Orchestra in Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique and the return of Charles Wadsworth and Joseph Flummerfelt with their troupes of young virtuosos for the Bank of America Chamber Music Series and the Choral and Westminster Choir concerts, respectively. ...

Pianist Emmanuel Ax has officially signed on to record a piece for the upcoming Music of Hope CD for the benefit of the American Cancer Society. Ax will record Bach's "Saraband" from the Partita No. 1 in B-Flat major. Additional artists on the collection, which is slated for release February 13, include Paul McCartney, Billy Joel, Andre Previn and Kurt Masur. ...

"Verdi: The Man, the Operas, the Legends," is the title of the largest exhibition ever devoted to composer Giuseppe Verdi. The three-month exhibit opened November 16 at Milan's Palazzo Reale and features more than 1,000 historical documents. The centenary of Verdi's death will be celebrated next year with special performances throughout the world. A gala opening at the Palazzo included a performance conducted by Riccardo Muti, which featured rare and never-performed works by the composer. ...

The London Symphony Orchestra will feature a two-month-long celebration of Czech music beginning in March. Led by Colin Davis and Jiri Belohlavek, the LSO will perform 10 concerts of works by Dvorak, Janacek, Suk, Martinu and others. The LSO and Davis will be coming to New York for their annual residency at Avery Fisher Hall from April 29 to May 2. They will present their Bohemian Springs series in New York, Washington and Chicago. ...

Composers including Ned Rorem, George Perle and Richard Danielpour are taking part in a new series called The Composer's Hour, which will be sponsored by the Copland Heritage Society. The series, which kicks off February 1, will feature each visiting composer discussing his work and creative process, as well as a concert of their works by the Copland House's resident ensemble and guest artists. The Copland House is the restored former home of Aaron Copland, in upstate New York. ...

Fulfilling his pledge to reschedule a performance in Detroit, tenor Luciano Pavarotti will perform his "Aida in Concert" there on December 21. The date is exactly one month after the originally scheduled performance, which was canceled due to an "unforeseen schedule conflict." It will be the first time the Italian tenor will sing Verdi's opera in concert. Pavarotti will be accompanied by the Michigan Opera Theatre Orchestra, along with a combined Michigan Opera Theatre Chorus and the Rackham Symphony Choir. Additional casting details will be announced later. The concert is a prelude to the Michigan Opera Theatre's yearlong Verdi Festival, which begins January 27 with the North American premiere of the Parma Opera Ensemble. ...

— sonicnet.com staff report