2013年8月2日 星期五

white, reactionary, coloration, time-honored, time-consuming

Most Americans Are Unhappy With Government
Two out of three, a recently conducted poll shows. It also confirms that supporters of the tea party movement are overwhelmingly white, conservative and disapproving of President Obama.



品質眾生相(42)

Notes of Sorrow in Changes at Steinway

By JAMES BARRON

With Steinway & Sons up for sale, pianists worry that the products just won't be the same.

Steinway & Sons 產品的緣份
我跟她說紐約時報近七年前有系列的介紹該公司:

Wikipedia article Steinway & Sons.此文內有一百多條的出處注解,蕭太太給我們看的專書一定在其中。那書前三分之一是介紹其歐美的家族,並說美國的鋼琴製造樹立了世界的標準。接下來的篇幅都記諸名演奏家與該公司的琴緣。

 
爱德华·卡拉斯科在施坦威皇后区的工厂工作。施坦威最近出售了它在曼哈顿的大厦,公司即将迎来新主人
Bryan Thomas for The New York Times
爱德华·卡拉斯科在施坦威皇后区的工厂工作。施坦威最近出售了它在曼哈顿的大厦,公司即将迎来新主人
 Notes of Sorrow in Changes at SteinwayBy JAMES BARRON July 13, 2013音樂施坦威鋼琴易手,音樂人哀嘆JAMES BARRON 2013年07月13日
First, Steinway & Sons closed on the sale of its Beaux-Arts Manhattan building on West 57th Street, where the likes of Sergei Rachmaninoff and Vladimir H​​orowitz once practiced. Three days later, it announced that it was planning to sell the whole company to a private-equity firm that owns more than 15 other medium-size manufacturers, making everything from windshield wipers to sewing machines to coffins.
施坦威(Steinway & Sons)鋼琴公司先是關閉了曼哈頓西57街上那棟學院派建築風格大廈內的生意,謝爾蓋·拉赫瑪尼諾夫(Sergei Rachmaninoff)和弗拉基米爾·霍洛維茨(Vladimir H​​orowitz)等人曾經在那裡練過琴。三天后,它又宣布計劃將整個公司賣給一家私募公司,該公司擁有15家中等規模的其他產品製造商,從汽車雨刷和縫紉機到棺材,無所不包。
For pianists who obsess about all things Steinway — is a brand-new Steinway as good as one from the 1920s, and are those made in Germany preferable to those made in New York? — the developments had the force of a one-two punch. Pianists cherish memories of the first time they set foot in the building and its famous basement, where generations of professional pianists have chosen the Steinways they played at concerts and recording sessions.
新造的施坦威是否會和20世紀20年代製造的施坦威一樣好?在德國製造的施坦威是不是比紐約製造的施坦威要好? ——許多鋼琴家們就是這樣痴迷施坦威的一切,對於他們來說,施坦威的新動向堪稱雙重打擊。鋼琴家們珍惜他們第一次走進這棟大廈以及它那著名的地下室的回憶,一代又一代職業鋼琴家就是在這個地下室選擇在音樂會上和錄音中使用的施坦威鋼琴。
They also worry that new owners could meddle with Steinway's time-honored and time-consuming manufacturing methods. Steinway spends almost a year building each grand piano, and pianists fret that an assembly line speedup at the company's two factories would spoil what they prize: the delicacy of a Steinway's touch, the colorations of its sound.
他們還擔心新主人會插手施坦威歷史悠久和耗時的生產方式。施坦威生產一台三角鋼琴要花費一年時間,鋼琴家們擔心在公司的兩家工廠里安裝高速流水生產線會毀掉他們最珍惜的東西:施坦威鋼琴精美的手感與聲音中豐富的色彩。愛德華·卡拉斯科在施坦威皇后區的工廠工作。施坦威最近出售了它在曼哈頓的大廈,公司即將迎來新主人
Bryan Thomas for The New York Times
愛德華·卡拉斯科在施坦威皇后區的工廠工作。施坦威最近出售了它在曼哈頓的大廈,公司即將迎來新主人
“There's concern any time there's a shift,” the pianist Gary Graffman said. “There's no way of my knowing: will they take as much care with each piano as they have in the past?”
“大家擔心他們會有所改變,”鋼琴家加里·格拉弗曼(Gary Graffman)說,“我無從得知,他們是否會像過去一樣關注每一台鋼琴呢?”
It is a question that has reverberated through the music world since the $438 million deal for the company was announced last week. The offer, which came from the private equity firm Kohlberg & Company, would take Steinway private. It has been traded under the stock symbol LVB, for Ludwig van Beethoven, since Steinway went public in 1996.
上個星期,施坦​​威公司宣布了這筆價值4.38億美元的交易,自那以後,這個問題就一直在音樂界迴響。這筆出價來自私募公司科爾伯格(Kohlberg & Company),它將收購施坦威公司。交易是以LVB,即路德維格·馮·貝多芬(Ludwig van Beethoven)的縮寫這個股票代碼進行的,施坦威自1996年上市以來一直使用這個代碼。
Steinway is now 13 days into a 45-day “go-shop” period, during which it can consider other bids, and at least one portfolio manager whose firm has a stake in Steinway has said the price is too low. Shares of Steinway closed at $36.18 on Friday, $1.18 above Kohlberg's $35-a-share offer.
施坦威擁有45天的“競購期”,在這期間,它可以考慮其他出價,同時需要至少一位其公司擁有施坦威股份的證券投資經紀人聲稱科爾伯格公司的價格過低,今天已到了第13天。週五施坦威股票的收盤價是36.18美元,比科爾伯格提供的35美元一股高出1.18美元。
Kohlberg is “not contemplating any changes to any of the manufacturing operations,” said a Kohlberg investment partner, Christopher W. Anderson, adding that there had been no discussion of closing or moving the factories in Astoria, Queens, and Hamburg, Germany. He would not comment on whether Steinway's top management would remain after the takeover. (Kohlberg's chairman, James A. Kohlberg, has been a director of The New York Times Company since 2008.)
科爾伯格公司目前“並不考慮對製造工序做出任何改變”,公司投資夥伴克里斯托弗·W·安德森(Christopher W. Anderson)補充說,公司沒有討論過關閉或遷移施坦威公司位於皇后區阿斯托利亞和德國漢堡的兩處工廠。對於收購後施坦威公司高層的去留,他表示無可奉告(科爾伯格的總裁詹姆斯·A·科爾伯格[James A. Kohlberg]自2008年開始成為《紐約時報》集團的董事之一)。
Beyond the balance sheet, Mr. Anderson, 38, has an interest in the company's products. “I grew up playing on a Steinway,” he said in an interview this week: an upright that once belonged to his great-grandmother. And on Friday, he posted a letter online to Steinway's dealers in which he said one of Kohlberg's “main goals for Steinway” was to “preserve and support everything that makes a Steinway piano special.” He also said that by going private, Steinway would be “ free from the short-term financial constraints of publicly-traded companies” and would have more latitude to “plan and invest with a long-term perspective.”
除了賬目明細,38歲的安德森先生對施坦威公司的產品也非常感興趣。 “我是彈著施坦威鋼琴長大的,”本週他在接受采訪時說——那是一台從太祖母那裡繼承下來的立式鋼琴。星期五,他在網上發布了一封致施坦威經銷商的公開信,聲稱科爾伯格公司“對施坦威公司的主要意圖”是“維護並支持令施坦威如此特殊的一切東西”。他還說,施坦威公司的股份由私人持有之後,便可以“避免上市公司面臨的短期經濟限制”,可以“計劃和投資長期目標”。
The deal would give Steinway its fifth set of owners. In 1972, the Steinway family — descendants of the immigrant instrument maker who started the company in 1853 — sold it to CBS. That marriage eventually soured, and in the 1980s, Steinway was sold to an investment group from Boston. Steinway changed hands again in the 1990s, when it was bought by what was then Selmer Industries, a band-instrument manufacturer with plants in the Midwest and South. The combined company was led by two investment bankers who had controlled Selmer, Kyle R. Kirkland and Dana D. Messina.
這項交易令施坦威公司迎來了它的第五期主人。 1853年,樂器生產者施坦威家族創立了這個公司,1972年,他們移民美國的後裔將公司賣給了CBS。這項合作很快破裂,20世紀80年代,施坦威被賣給波士頓的一個投資公司,於90年代再度易手,被賣給當時名為塞爾瑪工業(Selmer Industries)的樂隊樂器生產公司,它在中西部和南部擁有工廠。新的聯合公司由塞爾瑪的所有者,投資銀行家凱爾·R·科克蘭德(Kyle R. Kirkland)和戴納·D·麥西納(Dana D. Messina)所有。
Mr. Messina served as chief executive until 2011, stepping down after he and John M. Stoner Jr., the president of the band-instrument division, made a bid to buy everything but the company's piano operations. Steinway began a review of strategic alternatives that ended last December, when it turned down the Stoner-Messina offer and said the company was not for sale. Then came the overture from Kohlberg.
直至2011年,麥西納先生擔任公司首席執行官。與公司樂隊樂器部門負責人小約翰·M·斯通(John M. Stoner Jr.)出價收購公司除鋼琴部門之外的所有部門後,他從施坦威公司辭職。去年12月,施坦威公司拒絕了斯通-麥西納的出價,聲稱公司拒絕出售,並開始研究戰略替代者。之後便迎來了科爾伯格的提議。
Under Mr. Messina's replacement — Michael T. Sweeney, a former president of Starbucks in Britain who is chairman of the holding company for The Minneapolis Star-Tribune — Steinway's financial picture brightened. The company posted a profit of $2.7 million in the first quarter of 2013, up from $590,000 in the first quarter of 2012. Piano sales rose 2.9 percent worldwide.
接替麥西納職位的是英國星巴克的前總裁邁克爾·T·斯維尼(Michael T. Sweeney),如今擔任《明尼阿波利斯星論壇報》(The Minneapolis Star-Tribune)控股公司董事長。在他領導下,施坦威的經濟前景一片光明。公司公佈的2013年第一季度盈利為270萬美元,比起2012年同期的59萬美元大大增加。全球鋼琴銷售額增長了2.9%。
To keep pace with orders in Europe and Asia, Steinway has increased its work force by almost 20 percent in the last year at the Hamburg plant, and Mr. Sweeney said that leaving either New York or Hamburg “would be pushing the self-destruct button for an investor.”
為了滿足歐洲與亞洲的訂單,施坦威公司去年在漢堡的工廠增加了約20%的工人,斯維尼說,假如投資者將工廠搬離紐約或漢堡,“等於按下了自殺鍵”。
He said the building on 57th Street was another matter. He called it old and forbidding — it opened in 1925 down the block and across the street from Carnegie Hall — and a financial burden. Steinway is shopping for space in M​​anhattan, convenient to Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center, and Mr. Sweeney said he wanted a showroom where the pianos would look like “sculptural objects,” along with a recital hall and practice rooms.
他說,出售57街的建築是另一回事。那棟建築位於卡耐基音樂廳對面,落成於1925年,他說那裡已經是古舊的危房,而且是財政上的負擔。施坦威目前正在曼哈頓購買店面,方便將樂器運往卡耐基音樂廳和林肯中心,斯維尼說他希望新店裡有一個展示廳,可以把鋼琴像“雕塑”一樣陳列,同時還要有一個獨奏廳和若干練琴室。
Steinway must vacate the 57th Street space by the end of next year, and many pianists are sorry it is leaving. “I'm sure I'm with everybody else on this, that it's a shame that building will no longer be Steinway Hall, ” the pianist Emanuel Ax said. “One of the two times that I m​​et Horowitz for five seconds was when they did a celebration in that building after his 1965 return” to performing, at Carnegie Hall. “That was very, very meaningful.”
施坦威必須於明年年底搬出57街的建築,許多鋼琴家都對此感到難過。 “我敢肯定其他人的感受和我一樣,那棟建築不再屬於施坦威,真讓人難堪,”鋼琴家艾曼紐·阿克斯(Emanuel Ax)說。 “我曾在那裡見到過霍洛維茨兩次,其中一次只有五秒鐘,是1965年他重返樂壇時他們在那裡舉行慶祝會,”那場演出是在卡耐基音樂廳。 “那對我來說太有意義了。”


Copyright © 2013 The New York Times Company. All rights reserved.
本文最初發表於2013年7月13日。
翻譯:董楠

coloration

 

noun

  • 1the appearance of something with regard to colour:some bacterial structures take on a purple coloration
  • the natural colouring of animals or plants:the red coloration of many maples
  • a scheme of applying colour in art: the coloration of the drawing
  • 2the pervading character or tone of something:the productions have taken on a political coloration
  • a variety of musical or vocal expression:the subtle colorations of big-box speakers

Origin:

early 17th century: from late Latin coloratio(n-), from colorare 'to colour'
音節
col • or • a • tion
発音
kʌ`ləréiʃən
[名][U]
1 着色(法), 彩色(法).
2 色合い;血色;(生物の)天然の色.
3 (音声の)調子.
4 考え方, ものの見方;態度.
此 white 應指白種人
不是極端保守 下 第10 義
adj., whit·er, whit·est.
  1. Being of the color white; devoid of hue, as new snow.
  2. Approaching the color white, as:
    1. Weakly colored; almost colorless; pale: white wine.
    2. Pale gray; silvery and lustrous: white hair.
    3. Bloodless; blanched.
  3. Light or whitish in color or having light or whitish parts. Used with animal and plant names.
  4. also White Of or belonging to a racial group having light skin coloration, especially one of European origin: voting patterns within the white population.
  5. Not written or printed on; blank.
  6. Unsullied; pure.
  7. Habited in white: white nuns.
  8. Accompanied by or mantled with snow: a white Christmas.
    1. Incandescent: white flames.
    2. Intensely heated; impassioned: white with fury.
  9. Ultraconservative or reactionary.
  10. With milk added. Used of tea or coffee.


reactionary (ree-AK-shuh-ner-ee)

adjective: Opposed to change, progress, or reform; extremely conservative.
noun: An opponent of change, progress, or reform.

Etymology
From French réactionnaire. The word was used to describe an opponent of the French Revolution. Earliest documented use: 1799.

Usage
"Microsoft's critics portray its behavior as reactionary, saying the company is trying to protect old business models." — Ashlee Vance; Chasing Pirates: Inside Microsoft's War Room; The New York Times; Nov 6, 2010.

沒有留言: