I blame opera-l.
I've been a member since 1996, though I've been reading very selectively via the opera-l archive since about 1998. I just haven't got the bandwidth to read 80 postings per day, especially since opera-l's signal-to-noise ratio has deteriorated badly since I joined.
Sometime in September or October, 2004, browsing opera-l, I found the URL to an interview with Alex Ross of The New Yorker. The review mentioned his blog, The Rest is Noise, and my heart sank. I'd been carefully avoiding the blogsphere, which looked like a huge potential time sink. I could be practicing to take my sandan exam, or working on the Eva Turner biography, after all. But I followed the URL, which led to a few more URLs, and an interesting correspondence with Greg Sandow, and, well, here I am.
Oh goody! Another classical music blog! When I first started there were none but now it seems like I find one or two more every month.
ReplyDeleteI have no credentials but I frequently babble about classical music among other topics.
Lynn S
Reflections in D minor
Hi, and thanks for reading! I will list your blog, which I see is, indeed, on many topics.
ReplyDeleteMy plan is to stick to music and related subjects in this blog. My home page has fulminations on various political subjects - I even put in a good word for politicians - but they will stay there.
Hi, Nick. You have more of a stomach for the madness than I do, it sounds like. I think opera-l is a forum that would benefit from stronger and more thoughtful moderation than it gets.
ReplyDeleteOh, and I forgot to say - the response to your posting was both unfortunate and typical. People can get away with posting racist and homophobic remarks, but your interest in a particular demographic got attacked.
ReplyDelete