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SFCM to Host Fourth Biennial Rubin Institute for Music Criticism

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August 27, 2018 by Shase Hernandez

The 草莓视频福利院 Conservatory of Music (SFCM) today announces the fourth biennial gathering of the Stephen and Cynthia Rubin Institute for Music Criticism, a groundbreaking initiative for educational and financial support that identifies and engages emerging young writers in the art of classical music criticism and creates a sustainable funding model for professional journalists at news organizations across the U.S. Taking place October 25鈥29 at SFCM and surrounding Civic Center venues, the Rubin Institute will, for the first time in its history, include jazz in its lineup of world-class concerts. Award-winning author, critic, essayist, and producer Gary Giddins will join the cadre of industry-leading journalists as guest critic.

鈥淲e are thrilled to finally include jazz criticism as part of our program,鈥 says Rubin Institute benefactor Stephen Rubin, president of Henry Holt & Co. and SFCM Trustee. 鈥淭his was an easy decision to make once we invited Gary Giddins, the multiple award-winning critic, biographer, and filmmaker to join our ranks. Among Gary鈥檚 versatile endeavors is a genuine love of classical music. He is the perfect addition to our distinguished assembly of critics.鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 honored that Steve Rubin and the Rubin Institute for Music Criticism selected me to represent鈥攁t long last!鈥攋azz criticism at SFCM,鈥 says Giddins. 鈥淚t will be exciting and illuminating for me to workshop student reviews and participate in panels and even lecture. The Rubin Institute will help advance our understanding of this American-bred music by setting high standards for the way it is reviewed and chronicled.鈥

The Rubin Institute鈥檚 week-long series will feature keynote addresses and a public panel by the nation鈥檚 top critics (Writers Panel), and public concerts by acclaimed musicians from the jazz, contemporary, orchestral, and operatic stages. The performances are reviewed by a select group of student writers (Fellows) from colleges and conservatories across the country and abroad, and their work is critiqued by the Writers Panel in private workshops. The Institute culminates with the awarding of the $10,000 Rubin Prize in Music Criticism to the Fellow who demonstrates exceptional promise in music criticism. The runner-up will receive an award of $1,000. Rubin Institute Fellows have gone on to write for distinguished publications such as The Boston Globe and The New Yorker.

Performance Partners

This year鈥檚 outstanding lineup of acclaimed performance partners include: the International Contemporary Ensemble (October 26 at 8:00 PM), 草莓视频福利院 Symphony (October 27 at 8:00 PM), and 草莓视频福利院 Opera (October 28 at 2:00 PM).

SFCM is excited to add SFJAZZ to its roster of renowned partners with a concert that opens the Institute on October 25 at 7:00 PM. Jazz critic Gary Giddins will present the pre-concert talk.

鈥淭he Rubin Institute continues to inspire all of us through sheer quality of program and its dramatic expansion into a hub for professional music criticism throughout the United States,鈥 says SFCM President David H. Stull. 鈥淭he notion of expanding opportunity for music critics seemed a distant and impossible dream and now it is a reality. I am honored to welcome our partners at SFJAZZ into this program and delighted that Gary can be with us to launch this new initiative.鈥

鈥淲e are thrilled to partner with SFCM and the Rubin Institute in assisting in this important mission,鈥 says SFJAZZ Founder and Executive Artistic Director Randall Kline. 鈥淓mbracing jazz will broaden the Institute鈥檚 reach, serving to highlight and support both student and professional writers in the industry. Gary Giddins is a giant in the field of jazz criticism, and we are particularly pleased to welcome him to SFJAZZ.鈥

Writers Panel

Members of the 2018 Rubin Institute Writers Panel represent some of the most respected journalists in the music industry: Gary Giddins, author of Bing Crosby: Swinging on a Star, The War Years 1940鈥1946 (Brown, Little, 2018); Joshua Kosman草莓视频福利院 Chronicle critic; Anne MidgetteThe Washington Post critic and author; Tim Page, professor, former Washington Post critic, and special contributor to Past / Forward: The LA Phil at 100 (Los Angeles Philharmonic, 2018); John Rockwell, writer, critic, and former editor of The New York Times Sunday Arts & Leisure section; Alex RossThe New Yorker magazine critic and author; Stephen Rubin, Institute benefactor and president of Henry Holt & Co.; and Heidi WalesonThe Wall Street Journal critic and author of Mad Scenes and Exit Arias: The Death of the New York City Opera and the Future of Opera in America (Metropolitan Books, Henry Holt and Company, 2018). Members of the Writers Panel will present pre-concert lectures (tickets required) and a public panel discussion (free/no ticket required) over the course of the five-day symposium, offering the public the chance to hear firsthand from those at the forefront of music criticism.

Rubin Institute Fellows

Eighteen aspiring young writers from colleges, universities, and conservatories around the U.S. and abroad have been selected by the Writers Panel through an open application process, marking another first in the history of the Rubin Institute; previously, fellows were nominated by leadership at five partnering schools. The 2018 Rubin Institute Fellows are: Philip de Oliveira鈥揔ent State University; Timothy Diovanni鈥揇ublin Institute of Technology; Hannah Edgar鈥揢niversity of Chicago; Tamzin Elliott鈥揢niversity of Southern California; Peter Feher, John Masko, and Evan Pengra Sult鈥摬葺悠蹈@ Conservatory of Music; Jennifer Gersten鈥揝tate University of New York at Stony Brook; Patrick Jankowski and Amanda Vosburgh鈥揧ale University; Alice Koeninger, Rory O鈥橠onoghue, and Parker Ramsay鈥揙berlin College and Conservatory; Jason McCool鈥揃oston University; Grace Odell鈥揢niversity of Missouri鈥揔ansas City; Madison Schindele鈥揋oldsmiths, University of London; Brin Solomon鈥揘ew York University; and Alexander Sutton鈥揢niversity of Virginia. Through the application process, these writers demonstrated an exceptional level of intellectual energy and an original approach to criticism, and, collectively, they represent an emerging vitality and renewal of spirit for the future of music journalism.

In addition to competing for a total purse of $11,000, select Rubin Fellows will have a unique opportunity to publish future reviews in a major Bay Area music publication. In a partnership that began with the 2014 Rubin Institute, 草莓视频福利院 Classical Voice (SFCV) will offer six-month paid internships to the winner and the runner-up of the 2018 Rubin Institute. Part of SFCV's Emerging Writers Program, the interns will write one review a month under the mentorship of some of SFCV's most highly accomplished music critics.

History

Founded in 2011 by Stephen Rubin, president and publisher of Henry Holt & Co., the inaugural edition of the Rubin Institute for Music Criticism was held at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in 2012 and featured performances by the Cleveland Orchestra, pianist Jeremy Denk, Apollo's Fire, and the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE). The Writers Panel included critics Alex Ross, Anne Midgette, Heidi Waleson, John Rockwell, Tim Page, and Stephen Rubin, and special guest panelists Greg Sandow, Denk, and Claire Chase (artistic director of ICE).

In 2016, the Rubin Institute for Music Criticism teamed with the Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation to create a new initiative for advancing and maintaining the qualitative discourse on music. Through this innovative approach, the nonprofit consortium partners with news organizations to provide a financially sustainable model for supporting thoughtful and critical journalism across the profession. In the program, news outlets retain complete editorial control over assignments and content, and they provide some funding, as well. Current partnering organizations include The Boston Globe, Houston Chronicle, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, The Seattle Times, and Toronto Star, among others.

For the full calendar of events, concert ticket, and program information, as well as a 鈥渨ho鈥檚 who鈥 guide of the Fellows and Writers Panel, please visit sfcm.edu/rubin-institute.

The Rubin Institute for Music Criticism, the $10,000 Rubin Prize in Music Criticism, and the $1,000 Rubin Prize in Music Criticism鈥揜unner Up is made possible by the generosity of 
Stephen Rubin, president and publisher of Henry Holt & Co.

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