
Richard Anderson
Arts Editor at Jackson Hole Daily
Features + Arts @JacksonHoleNews: art, music, business, etc. Jazz freak, tree hugger, philatelist ...
Articles
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4 days ago |
jhnewsandguide.com | Richard Anderson
More than a dozen of the valley’s most dedicated student string musicians will perform in Jackson Hole Youth Orchestra’s annual spring concert Saturday in the Center for the Arts’ amphitheater, outside the theater lobby.
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4 days ago |
jhnewsandguide.com | Richard Anderson
With 25 years under its belt, Pam Phillips’ and Mary Murfitt’s Jackson Hole musical “Petticoat Rules” deserves the label “classic.” Its songs are still fresh and lively, its stories remain relevant and important, and its characters continue to engage and entertain. And, as Andrew Munz and Tumbleweed Creative Arts’ silver anniversary revival of the show demonstrates, it’s also quite adaptable.
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4 days ago |
jhnewsandguide.com | Richard Anderson
Imagine it’s late July, 1923. After intense discussions going late into the night, during which you and a handful of prominent Jackson Hole citizens hatched a plan to save the valley floor at the base of the Teton Range from development, you step out the door of Maud Noble’s cabin near the Snake River for a breath of fresh air. You take a look at the mountains shining beneath the waxing gibbous moon, and a long drink from the bottomless cup of the star-strewn sky.
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6 days ago |
jhnewsandguide.com | Richard Anderson
Sometimes love, loyalty and goodness do triumph, even in the opera world. The Grand Teton Music Festival will screen the Metropolitan Opera’s “Live in HD” production of “Fidelio,” Beethoven’s only opera, at 3 p.m. today in the Center for the Arts. Beethoven found writing “Fidelio” so arduous and unpleasant — he revised and rewrote parts of it numerous times after its original premiere in November 1805, including four versions of its overture — that he swore to never compose another opera.
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1 week ago |
jhnewsandguide.com | Richard Anderson
“In time, perhaps this life of ours, the one we’re so proud of, will seem strange, stupid, messy, perhaps even sinful … .”So says the lovesick, philosophical Lieutenant Colonel Aleksandr Ignatyevich Vershinin, at a birthday party, no less, in Anton Chekhov’s play “Three Sisters.” The line points unambiguously toward what is to come in this 1900 work by Russia’s master storyteller and playwright.
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RT @ethan_iverson: You’d think the DRUMMER ON KIND OF BLUE wouldn’t need to sweat medical expenses late in his life...Can’t the goddamn gov…

RT @sonnyrollins: RIP Lorraine Gordon of the VIllage Vanguard https://t.co/5WhmbrcC4m

Believe it or not, I DO NOT currently own this album ... I ought to rectify that. https://t.co/Ju7L2PRAHX

Who can forget the first time they heard The Girl from Ipanema? Recording sessions for Getz/Gilberto began on this day in 1963. The album would introduce millions to bossa nova and continues to be one of the best-selling jazz recordings of all time. https://t.co/ZoKtgDIXzN