The Future is Freelance 08/12/2011
![]() John Terauds of the Toronto Star. Today, the Toronto Star’s classical music critic, John Terauds, announced on his blog that he’ll no longer be writing about music for the paper. Apparently, he’s been reassigned to the business section. I emailed him to ask what was going on at the Star. Does this mean that Canada’s largest daily newspaper is eliminating classical music coverage? “I think, but I'm only guessing, that the future is freelance,” he replied. For several years, Terauds held the distinction of being the only “just classical” music critic with a full-time job at a newspaper in English Canada. (I’m not sure what the current situation in Canada’s French-language press is.) In this role, he succeeded the long-serving William Littler in 2005. With Terauds’ departure, it looks like an era has come to an end. Although he and I write for competing papers, John has always been a friendly colleague. And he worked under demanding conditions: I didn’t envy him, when I saw him furiously writing a review during a performance, so he could file his story well before midnight. (At the Globe and Mail, critics enjoy the luxury of being able to sleep on a review.) I hope this isn’t starting to sound too much like an obituary. And I hope John will find some way to continue to write about music. If he's right, and “the future is freelance,” then I must be living in the future. And believe me, the future is pretty lean, and there’s no dental plan. His abrupt departure from the music beat at the Star once again raises the question of how classical music criticism can sustain itself. Some say that the internet is leading the way into a brave new world of classical-music criticism – a world without deadlines, word-limits and competition for space with the pop-music juggernaut. Others say that it’s given a voice to every know-nothing idiot with a computer. Either way, it’s not at all clear how to make online criticism pay the bills. © Colin Eatock 2011 Comments08/15/2011 12:29
Thanks to @chrisfoley for bringing our attention to your article on @JohnTerauds, and what this indicates about the place of classical music criticism in the world today.
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Brian Meighan 08/25/2011 13:25
Aside from the classical music challenges in a twitter society with a memory span less than that of an ant and the pervasiveness of pop culture, newspaper support for music criticism in this Brave New World meets the world of economics.Our lives are predominated by the almighty dollar.
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08/27/2011 08:54
I regret that John has been moved out of his job, quite abruptly it seems. But how is this the end of an era? Before John came along, the Star hadn't had a full-time classical critic in three decades. William Littler divided his time between music and dance.
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I'm a composer and writer based in Toronto – and this is my classical music blog, Eatock Daily. ArchivesFebruary 2012 Index
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