For many years, Sandow was best known as a critic, both of classical music and pop. As a critic, Sandow wrote for
The Village Voice in the 1980s. His column was on new classical music, though he also wrote about the mainstream repertory, typically challenging traditional assumptions about its function and its meaning. In recent years his writing has appeared in the
New York Times Book Review,
Opera News, and the
Wall Street Journal, where for a long time he was a regular contributor. In pop music, he became chief pop critic of the
Los Angeles Herald-Examiner in 1988, and in 1990 joined the staff of
Entertainment Weekly, which had just begun publication, and where he served first as music critic and then as senior music editor. and the South Dakota Symphony. Since 1997 he has taught at the
Juilliard School as a member of the Graduate Studies Faculty, and from 2006 to 2009 also taught at the
Eastman School of Music, where he gave the commencement address in 2008. He blogs about the future of classical music on the ArtsJournal.com website. notably for the
International UFO Reporter, a quarterly publication of the
Center for UFO Studies. Sandow is married to
Anne Midgette, herself a former classical music reviewer for
The New York Times and formerly chief classical music critic for
The Washington Post. They live in
Washington, D.C., and
Warwick,
New York. They have one child, Rafael Aron Sandow, born October 15, 2011. ==References==