Copious Notes

The journal of a Kentucky culture vulture

  • Oct
    19

    Ronan Tynan has recorded a lot of classical and pop hits. He may want to consider adding the Pink Floyd song One Slip to his repertoire, because an offhanded anti-Semitic remark is costing him dearly.

    Ronan Tynan. 2007 AP photo by Don Heupel.

    Ronan Tynan. 2007 AP photo by Don Heupel.

    The tenor, a mainstay at New York Yankee games who performed at the Singletary Center with the Lexington Philharmonic Oct. 10, was with a real estate agent showing an apartment building when the incident occurred. According to the New York Times, the real estate agent joked to Tynan that the prospective tennant, New York University physician Gabrielle Gold-Von Simson, was not a Boston Red Sox fan.

    Tynan’s shocking reply: “I don’t care about that, as long as they are not Jewish.”

    Gold-Von Simson contacted the Yankees, who in turn contacted Tynan. As soon as Tynan admitted the remark, Yankees spokesman Howard Rubenstein said Tynan was disinvited from singing at Friday night’s opening game of the American League Championship Series and will not perform again at Yankee Stadium this season. The Yankees are one of four teams remaining in the hunt for a World Series championship, this year.

    Since games following the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, in New York, Washington D.C. and Pennsylvania, it has been a tradition for Tynan to sing his distinctive rendition of God Bless America during the seventh-inning stretch at post-season games and other special games at Yankee Stadium.

    In Saturday’s Irish Times, Tynan said he was distraught, and that his offhanded comment about some other prospective tenants was misunderstood. He told the paper the roots of the comment were in a visit by other potential residents three weeks before:

    “Two Jewish ladies were coming to view it and the agent said, ‘They are very particular’. And I said, ‘I don’t know how they will deal with having a singer beside them, practicing all the time. That could be scary.’ We laughed about it.”

    According to the Irish paper, his snappy reply was, “At least they’re not the Jewish ladies.”

    Tynan, a Kilkenny, Ireland native, told the paper he has never been anti-Semitic and that three members of his band are Jewish. According to the Yankees spokesman, Tynan did call the doctor and apologize to her satisfaction. He also made a contribution to a charity of her choice: KiDs of NYU, an organization that supports children’s health services at the university’s Langone Medical Center.

    Tynan also apologized to Major League Baseball Saturday, telling the Associated Press, in part, “Several days ago I made a joke that was insensitive. My attempt at humor was inappropriate and hurtful to the person who heard it.”

    Still, the comment has cost Tynan his treasured Yankees gig for this season. The Yankees say he may be invited back in future seasons.

    Other impacts to Tynan’s career remain to be seen.

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  • Aug
    7

    Alltech announced the lineup for its 16-day Fortnight Festival Sept. 25-Oct. 10. Like last year, the event will kick off with a country concert at Applebee’s Park and feature performances around the state, many of which are associated with series by other venues and organizations.

    Unlike last year, the event is confined to just over two weeks. Sept. 25 is significant as it will mark exactly one year until the 2010 Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games.

    The lineup is:

    • Ricky Skaggs

      Ricky Skaggs performs in Ashland Oct. 8 and Owensboro Oct. 10.

      Sept. 25 - Jason Aldean and Miranda Lambert, Applebee’s Park, Lexington

    • Sept. 26 - Bettye LaVette, Singletary Center for the Arts, Lexington
    • Sept. 26-27 - Beguiled Again by Actors Guild of Lexington, Downtown Arts Center, Lexington
    • Sept. 28 - Fairplay Collective, Downtown Arts Center, Lexington
    • Sept. 29 - Singer/Songwriter Night, Downtown Arts Center, Lexington
    • Sept. 30 - Marc Smith Poetry Slam, Downtown Arts Center, Lexington
    • Oct. 1 - Makem & Spain Brothers, Lexington Opera House, Lexington
    • Oct. 2 - Mary Chapin Carpenter, Equus Run Vineyard, Midway
    • Oct. 3 - 38 Special & Kansas, Murray State University Regional Special Events Center, Murray
    • Oct. 6 - The Decemberists, Singletary Center for the Arts, Lexington
    • Oct. 6-7 - Battle of the Bluegrass, Tin Roof, Lexington
    • Oct. 8 - Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder, Paramount Arts Center, Ashland
    • Oct. 9 - John Sebastian of The Lovin’ Spoonful, Grand Theatre, Frankfort
    • Oct. 10 - String Band Day, Appalshop, Whitesburg
    • Oct. 10 - Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder, RiverPark Center, Owensboro
    • Oct. 10 - Ronan Tynan with the Lexington Philharmonic Orchestra, Singletary Center for the Arts, Lexington

    Visit the Alltech website for tickets to each event.

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  • Jun
    28
    Scott Terrell leads a rehearsal of the Lexington Philharmoinic Orchestra Tuesday evening at the Singletary Center for the Arts Concert Hall. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.

    Scott Terrell leads a rehearsal of the Lexington Philharmoinic Orchestra before the October 2008 audition concert that ultimately won him the job. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.

    After Scott Terrell was named the new music director of the Lexington Philharmonic, most people, even the orchestra staff, figured the next time we’d see him would be in September for a gala season opener.

    But Terrell had different ideas.

    The conductor will be on the podium next weekend as the Philharmonic plays its annual Fourth of July concerts in Lexington Friday Night at Transylvania University and Versailles Saturday night at Woodford County Park.

    “I was here, I was available, and it’s a big community event,” Terrell said from his Lexington home. “I thought it was an appropriate way to introduce myself.”

    It’s also going to be a chance for Terrell to introduce a bit of his musical sensibility.

    “There are going to be the traditional things that have always been there,” Terrell says. “But we’re also going to look at the breadth of American music, and what that means.”

    What that means in this concert is we will hear some classic American tunes such as the Shaker melody, Simple Gifts; we’ll hear classic movie themes such as Henry Mancini’s for The Pink Panther and Lalo Schifrin’s Mission: Impossible theme; we’ll hear classic show tunes from Lerner and Lowe and standards from Cole Porter.

    “While it is patriotic in parts, the broader scope is Americana,” Terrell says.

    There will be numerous patriotic concert standbys, including the Star-Spangled Banner, My Old Kentucky Home and Stars and Stripes Forever.

    But Terrell said he saw the concerts as chances to, “reshape that program, and usher in a new era.”

    Thus far, Terrell says he’s received a good reaction from people in the orchestra and concert presenters who have seen the program.

    Terrell has been putting the program together at the same time he has been moving to Lexington from Charleston, S.C., where he lived as resident conductor of the Charleston Symphony Orchestra.

    He has also been solidifying the program for the Philharmonic’s upcoming 2009-10 season. Some noteworthy additions include:

    ■ Irish tenor Ronan Tynan in an Oct. 10 concert that will be part of the Alltech Fortnight Festival.

    ■ Acclaimed violinist Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg in an April 17 concert to benefit UK HealthCare.

    Information on those concerts and all upcoming Philharmonic events will be available at the Fourth concerts, which are some of the Philharmonic’s biggest events of the year.

    “I wanted to do it, and that’s the bottom line,” Terrell said of the concerts. “It’s too much fun and too much of a community event not to take part.”

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  • Jun
    25

    The Lexington Philharmonic’s new music director, Scott Terrell, is going to start his tenure with more marquee names on the season schedule than the orchestra has had in quite a while. In addition to Evelyn Glennie, probably the best-known classical solo percussionist in the world Sept. 25, the Phil will also present:

    Ronan Tynan.

    Ronan Tynan.

    Irish tenor Ronan Tynan in a concert that will be part of the Alltech Fortnight Festival Oct. 10. Tynan came to fame as one of the Three Irish Tenors and has been a ubiquitous presence at New York Yankees games in the past decade singing the full version of God Bless America. Terrell says this concert will probably tell him a lot about possible directions in which to take a revived Philharmonic Pops season.

    World-renowned violinist Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg will join the orchestra for an April 17 concert benefitting UK HealthCare. Terrell says Sonnenberg will be playing Astor Piazolla’s take on The Four Seasons.

    Nadja Salerno Sonnenberg. Photo by Grant Leighton.

    Nadja Salerno Sonnenberg. Photo by Grant Leighton.

    The violinist added for the Feb. 12 Masterclassics concert is also a bit of a get: Arnaud Sussmann, who won a prestigious Avery Fisher career grant in April along with Alessio Bax, who is the pianist with the UBS Chamber Music Festival of Lexington, Aug. 26-30.

    Also added to the full schedule, which will be released next week, are family concerts on Oct. 25 (a Youth Arts concert that will feature members of the Central Kentucky Youth Orchestras playing with the Phil and other young artists) and Dec. 13, which will bring Paragon Music Theatre director Ryan Shirar back to the Philharmonic podium.

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About Rich Copley & Copious Notes

Raised by opera-loving parents in a rock ’n’ roll world, Rich Copley has parlayed his broad interests into his career writing about arts and entertainment. Since 1998, he has covered performing arts, film and faith-based popular culture for the Lexington Herald-Leader, the daily newspaper in Lexington, Ky. MORE | E-mail Rich


 

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