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May 10, 2004

Ticketplace moves to new location

Just a note to local arts-goers: tomorrow Ticketplace, the great resource for half-price day-of-show (and some advance) tickets, moves from the Old Post Office Pavilion to its new location at 407 Seventh Street NW (at D Street). The closest Metro stop is Archives, but Gallery Place is just one more block away, if you, like me, are likely to take the Red Line from work and don’t want to switch lines to go just one stop. Hours will be mostly the same, except Saturdays will shift one hour earlier, so the new schedule is Tue.-Fri. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., and Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

I’m hoping they continue to carry tickets for the Tennessee Williams festival at the Kennedy Center. Can’t wait to see those plays.

Straight from video

Film scores are now common repertoire in symphony halls. But as perhaps an indicator of how video-game development these days increasingly resembles that of motion pictures (I’m no expert in the gaming arena, to be sure), the newest medium for symphony concert material is video-game soundtracks. From the Times, “Video Fantasy Replaces Mozart (But Who’s Keeping Score?)”:

The Los Angeles Philharmonic, which typically plays scores by composers like Beethoven and Brahms, will perform music tonight more often heard while keeping score.

The Philharmonic’s program will consist entirely of excerpts from the Japanese composer Nobuo Uematsu’s soundtrack music for “Final Fantasy,” a popular series of action-adventure video games.

It turns out that “Final Fantasy” developer Square Enix is producing the concert (they hired the Philharmonic and rented the hall, after convincing orchestra officials to go forward with the program), so in a way this particular concert is just as product-driven as music-driven, one of the critics in the article observes. But still, I have to admit, concerts like this—scores performed with projected scenes—are kind of cool. Related: Nobuo Uematsu website at Square Enix.

[Update (11 July): An excerpt of the concert will air on G4techTV’s Cinematech on Tues., July 13 at 10:30 p.m. EST. (Link via Sketchee.)]

‘Wicked’ leads Tony nominations

This year’s Tony Award nominations were announced this morning, and the awards ceremony, hosted by Hugh Jackman, will take place Sunday, June 6. (Did we all see Hugh on Ellen last Friday? What a charmer. We simply must have him over for dinner sometime.) By the way, today’s Morning Edition ran an interview with Stephen Schwartz (Wicked, Pippin, Godspell) about his inspirations; additional audio clips are available at the NPR website.

[Update (13:47): Schwartz’s Children of Eden is in town at Ford’s Theatre through June 6.]