Ads 468x60px

Showing posts with label Latin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Latin. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Latin jazz players file suit over cut Grammy award (AP)

NEW YORK – Some Latin jazz musicians have filed a class-action lawsuit against the organization that gives out the Grammy Awards, accusing the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences of harming them by eliminating it as a separate category in next year's awards.

The lawsuit, filed Monday in state Supreme Court in Manhattan, calls for the Best Latin Jazz Album category to be reinstated.

"They shouldn't have done this," said Roger Maldonado, lead attorney for the plaintiffs, who include Bobby Sanabria, a Grammy-nominated Latin jazz musician and Grammy nominee Mark Levine, a pianist and composer.

"Not only does it devalue the category of music and the work these musicians do," he said, "It makes it much harder for them to gain recognition."

The lawsuit names four plaintiffs and looks to include other members of the academy who would compete in the category to sign on.

In a statement, the academy said it "believes this frivolous lawsuit is without merit, and we fully expect to prevail."

The academy said in April that the number of award categories was being cut from 109 to 78. The changes included decisions like eliminating the male and female divisions in the pop vocal category to one general field as well as reducing categories like children's spoken-word album; Zydeco or Cajun music album; best Latin jazz album; and best classical crossover album.

Instead, artists who would have competed in those categories will now be part of a broader pool all competing in a general field. So instead of vying for the Best Latin Jazz Album, the musicians could go up against a range of artists looking to take home the Best Jazz Instrumental Album, for example.

But that larger pool could tip the balance in favor of bigger, more well-known artists at the expense of smaller ones, Maldonado said.

"The concern is by lumping several categories together, it makes it much easier for larger record labels and those artists who have already gained recognition to dominate," he said.

The lawsuit accuses the academy of having a detrimental effect on the musicians' careers by taking away the Latin jazz category specifically.

"Even being nominated for the award has enormous value for these musicians," Maldonado said.

It also says the academy didn't follow the proper procedures to make this kind of change and that members weren't informed or given the chance to offer input on how the cuts would affect them.


Yahoo! News

Latin jazz artists sue Grammys for dropping their category (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Four Latin jazz artists are suing the organizers of the Grammy Awards, alleging the elimination of their category from next year's competition has caused them irreparable harm.

Musicians Robert Sanabria, Benjamin Lapidus, Mark Levine and Eugene Marlow accused the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences Inc. of violating its fiduciary and contractual obligations in April when it cut 31 categories from the annual awards ceremony, including Latin jazz.

The musicians' complaint was filed earlier this week in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan.

The lawsuit also accused the Academy of failing to consider the adverse impact the decision would have on the musicians' careers.

"There's nothing like having the ability to say 'Grammy-nominated,' 'Grammy-award-winning,'" their lawyer Roger Maldonado said on Tuesday.

The plaintiffs, who are seeking class-action status, accused the Academy specifically of failing to solicit input from the voting members of its 12 nationwide chapters before announcing the eliminations.

The Academy said in a statement: "The Recording Academy believes this frivolous lawsuit is without merit, and we fully expect to prevail."

In its news release announcing the eliminations, Academy officials said all general musical genres, such as rock, country, and jazz, would remain intact. The number of categories, however, would be condensed from 109 to 78.

"A transformation of the entire awards structure would ensure that all Fields would be treated with parity," the release said.

In the field of jazz, musicians who previously competed for "Best Latin Jazz Album" will now compete for "Best Jazz Instrumental Album" or "Best Jazz Vocal Album."

Maldonado said this puts his clients at a disadvantage. "You would have to submit under the broad jazz category, now. You're competing against any other number of genres that are not going to be viewed the same," he said. "You're also trying to compare apples and oranges in a way that just doesn't work."

(Reporting by Jennifer Golson; editing by Barbara Goldberg and Jerry Norton)


Yahoo! News

Friday, May 27, 2011

Opera broadcasts build Latin American audiences (AP)

By OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ, Associated Press Olga R. Rodriguez, Associated Press – Thu May 26, 2:13 pm ET

MEXICO CITY – The first thing opera buff Marcelo Perez did when he retired eight years ago was take a bus to the U.S. border and then a train to New York, where he realized a lifelong dream by catching a performance at the Metropolitan Opera.

From a nosebleed seat at the Met, the 76-year-old former office assistant for Mexico's Treasury Department saw Puccini's "Tosca," which tells the story of a love triangle involving an opera singer, an artist and a police chief, as well as torture, murder and suicide.

"The music pierced right through my soul," Perez recalled. "The experience was grandiose."

On a recent afternoon, Perez was preparing to catch another opera, Verdi's "Il Trovatore," but without the bus and train rides. This performance was being broadcast live from the Met to a packed house at Mexico City's National Auditorium, the biggest arts and culture venue in the capital.

In fact, growing numbers of people around Mexico and Latin America are filling auditoriums and movie theaters to catch simulcasts of live performances beamed from the Met. With low ticket prices and strong word of mouth, the broadcasts are introducing many in the region to the kind of world-class opera and dance previously available only in U.S. and European cities.

Opera simulcasts around Latin America are often sold out, and in Mexico City, the Met operas have been such a success with people of all ages that the National Auditorium this year added ballets staged by Russia's Bolshoi Theater and the Opera National de Paris.

High-definition technology "has democratized these art forms and made them available to all the people who can't afford to travel and pay the 300 dollars a ticket," said Giovanni Cozzi, president of Rising Alternative, a New York-based company that has international distribution rights for the Bolshoi Ballet, Opera de Paris and Teatro alla Scala Milan, among other institutions.

Rising Alternative is distributing delayed broadcasts of Bolshoi Theater and Opera National performances to Mexico, Peru and Brazil. Outlets in Colombia, Argentina and Costa Rica have also expressed interest in getting the broadcasts next season, Cozzi said. The company distributes such works to 30 countries.

The Met program pioneered simulcasts with a performance of Mozart's "The Magic Flute" shown in 60 places in the U.S., Canada and the United Kingdom during the 2006-2007 season. The program was so popular that the opera house expanded the high-definition satellite broadcasts to 1,500 screens in 46 countries, reaching 2 million spectators a year worldwide, said Met general manager Peter Gelb.

"The core audience is opera fans, but this is our tool to help develop new audiences as well," Gelb said. "Opera is not for everyone. It's for an intelligent audience that is interested in great singing, in great theater, but everything we're doing is to make it available to as many people as possible."

During a recent Mexico City showing of "Il Trovatore," all 6,500 seats were sold out at $3.50 to $35 each. Seeing the opera at the Met costs from $30 to $330.

Spanish subtitles translated the Italian of Verdi's dark masterpiece, which recounts a deadly rivalry between two long-lost brothers that results in infanticide and, yes, a climactic suicide.

Jorge Gutierrez, promotions director for the National Auditorium, said prices were kept low to attract opera newcomers and compete with other attractions in the city. The auditorium, which has the rights to distribute the Met program within Mexico, has expanded it to eight other Mexican cities.

"If you don't know about opera and have never listened to it, it can be intimidating," said Karina Pedroza, a 22-year-old nutrition student who was getting ready to watch her first opera at the National Auditorium, Wagner's "Die Walkure," which closed the Met's 2010-2011 season.

"The Met can summon the best in the world and spare no cost; that's why it would be impossible for an opera like that to come to Mexico," Gutierrez said. "Even if they went on tour, it would be impossible for us to afford bringing the performance here."

On a recent afternoon, about 700 people, mostly seniors, packed a small auditorium where Mexican opera expert Sergio Vela gave a pre-show talk and described Verdi's melancholic tendencies in a blow-by-blow account of "Il Trovatore." Some in the audience said the shows, despite their violent themes, were an escape from the drug wars engulfing parts of Mexico.

"Opera is filled with something special, and there are so many ugly things happening in our country that you can take a Saturday afternoon and come here and disconnect with these performances," said Teresa Moreno, a 73-year-old housewife, who brought her 38-year-old son.

For Marcelo Perez, who lives on a monthly pension of about $380, the Met simulcasts offer him a chance to enjoy the art form he fell in love with after watching a local company's performance of Verdi's "La Traviata" in 1970 at Mexico City's Palacio de Bellas Artes.

At the recent "Il Trovatore," he broke into applause as soprano Sondra Radvanovsky, who played the heroine Leonora, sang her final aria, "D'amor sull'ali rosee" ("On the rosy wings of love"). The camera closed in on Radvanovsky's pain-filled face as she lamented her beloved's imprisonment, before poisoning herself in a final act of love.

"It would be better to see it live," Perez whispered during the scene, "but it's so well done that it captures you."


Yahoo! News


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Latin Grammys to return to Las Vegas for 2011 show (AP)

LAS VEGAS – The Latin Grammys are returning to Sin City.

The Latin Recording Academy announced Thursday that the awards show will once again be held at the Mandalay Bay Events Center on the Las Vegas Strip. The 12th annual show is scheduled for Nov. 10.

Univision will continue to broadcast the show live.

Nominations will be announced Sept. 14 in Los Angeles.

The awards show has consecutively been held in Las Vegas since 2009.


Yahoo! News


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.