Louder: The Pandemic’s Toll on New York’s Arts

Plus: Prince, Lenny Kravitz, Idles and More
Author Headshot

By Caryn Ganz

Pop Music Editor

If this were a normal Friday, I’d be thinking about whether I had the energy to go to a show tonight. Or tomorrow. Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds would have been at Barclays Center this weekend. I may have popped by the Mercury Lounge over the past few days and had an encounter with its legendary doorwoman, Maggie, who has a propensity for telling me I’m not on the list (nothing personal, this is just part of the deal).

Of course, none of this is happening. The impact on me is negligible; I miss live music, but I will be OK. The impact on the city I live in and love is gargantuan. Lives upended; jobs lost; beloved establishments shuttering. “Before the pandemic, the city boasted 280,000 jobs in the fine and performing arts,” a team of our Culture reporters write. “Between April and July, 153,000 of those jobs disappeared.” That statistic is from a package in Sunday’s Arts & Leisure looking at this “lost weekend” in the city’s arts world: a deep dive into its economic consequences along with personal stories of those who have been so greatly affected.

Maggie Wrigley, who has helmed the Mercury Lounge Door for more than two decades, is not at work today. “For New York to not have live music — it’s like the ground has gone out from underneath us,” she said. I look forward to being turned away as soon as possible.

Also this week: Jon Pareles on the reissue of Prince’s landmark “Sign O’ the Times.” (I was delighted to discover Jon had written our original review of the album in 1987. It’s rare to get to watch a critic’s opinion on such an important artist evolve over the decades; this is special.) Rob Tannenbaum spoke with Lenny Kravitz about his new memoir and his legacy of cool; Ben Sisario reported on Noelle Scaggs from Fitz and the Tantrums’ efforts to help bring diversity to the concert industry; and Jon Caramanica gave us an affectionate education on the soul musician Roy Hammond, who made a heavily sampled track called “Impeach the President” that changed hip-hop.

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