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...Otto Friedrich, author of such previous books as Before the Deluge and City of Nets and a TIME senior writer. In Glenn Gould: A Life and Variations (Random House; $24.95), Friedrich counterpoints Gould's prolific writings with the reminiscences of more than 80 people who knew him, from Leonard Bernstein to his cousin Jessie Greig. The result is a guided tour through the mind of a haunted original who dreamed of "a world where nobody cared what anybody else was doing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Singing Mahler to the Elephants | 5/22/1989 | See Source »

...away those dress-for-success books. Forget the management mystique. The key to thriving in the corporate jungle is understanding dinosaurs. So say Albert Bernstein, a clinical psychologist in Portland, Ore., and Sydney Craft Rozen, a former English instructor at Clark College in Vancouver, Wash. In Dinosaur Brains (John Wiley; $18.95) they examine the prehistoric reptile that lurks inside every employee like an evolutionary time bomb. Beneath that fragile fabric of reason called human intelligence, they argue, beats a powerful engine of lizard logic that demands instant gratification and lives to dominate. While the dinosaurs are long gone, their brains...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: I See, I Want, I Get - Maybe | 5/8/1989 | See Source »

...round is spinning again. Today Levine is the favorite to step into Karajan's shoes, thanks to his good working relationship with the self-governing ensemble during his regular guest-conducting stints. Other possible contenders: Maazel, the Boston Symphony's Seiji Ozawa, Philadelphia's Muti and, farther afield, Leonard Bernstein, now a freelance guest conductor. What marks the new sweepstakes is the increasing desperation with which orchestras pursue the same handful of podium personalities. It is | not that there are too few good conductors, but that there are so few who meet the economic requirements: a hefty recording contract...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Now, A Grab for New Chairs | 5/8/1989 | See Source »

...will be expected to maintain the Philharmonic's highly lucrative recording income -- another factor that favors Levine. The New York Philharmonic, for its part, has suffered under Mehta's indifferent performances and low appeal to record buyers. It needs a conductor with fire in the belly like Bernstein; if Billy Martin can be hired by the Yankees five times, can't Lenny come back once? Los Angeles, where the orchestra plays second fiddle to the movies and the Lakers, needs a high-profile glamour boy willing, or indifferent enough, to share power with Fleischmann: Salonen, perhaps, or Rattle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Now, A Grab for New Chairs | 5/8/1989 | See Source »

News Editor for This Issue: Ross G. Forman '90 Night Editors: Colin F. Boyle '90 Susan B. Glasser '90 Spencer S. Hsu '90 Teresa A. Mullin '90 Joseph R. Palmore '91 Eric S. Solowey '91 Features Editor: Susan B. Glasser '90 Editorial Editor: Emily M. Bernstein '90 Sports Editor: Julio R. Varela '90 Photography Editor: William H. Bachman '92 Business Editor: Andrew R. Jassy '90 Copy Editor: Mallika J. Marshall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Editor for This Issue | 5/5/1989 | See Source »

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