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Dzeidman (talk·contribs) / Tiboris, Peter This user has contributed to the article. This user has declared a connection. (Editor was employee of article subject at the time of writing, but no longer is, per Talk page discussion.)
I believe this article's original author, and most-frequent editor to date, is User:Dzeidman. I have opened a conversation with them, "User talk:Dzeidman#Do_you_perhaps_have_a_conflict_of_interest?". I am concerned that this article reads like an official biography or hagiography, rather than a neutral point-of-view assessment. While the article has some citations to reliable sources, they tend to support minor points rather than the primary claims of the article. For example, the lede says, 'Mr. Tiboris' concerts have been hailed by The New York Times as "sizzling and precise," and "vigorous...alert and energetic."', but the citation is to one 1990 review of one debut concert, not to recent reviews of multiple recent performances. The article has no negative views. Either Mr. Tiboris is perfect, or the article isn't fully neutral. I also think that it has too many non-notable details: do we really need to know that his brother is a dentist? I encourage independent editors to revise this article to make it better comply with WP:NPOV. --Jdlh | Talk15:39, 9 October 2014 (UTC)[reply]
http://www.nytimes.com/1995/06/12/arts/union-fights-visas-for-2-orchestras.html Labour dispute over hiring of European orchestras by MidAmerica. Connections between MidAmerica and Tzell Travel. "To the old question of how to get to Carnegie Hall, there's a new answer: Call Peter Tiboris. In what has become a veritable rite of spring, the conductor and presenter rents the 57th Street hall and fills it with college and community choruses from the hinterlands who are happy to pay their own way and then some for the privilege." Also this great quote: 'Galen Marshall, conductor of the Masterworks Chorale of San Mateo, Calif., said his group was "happy as can be" with the two trips and performances Mr. Tiboris had arranged for them in recent years. "I expect Peter made plenty," he said. "But I say to those who ask: 'It's like a cruise. Don't get involved trying to break down who's getting what.' "' And this, 'Ron Sell, a French-horn player with the American Symphony Orchestra, said he did not blame Mr. Tiboris for seeking cost-cutting measures when the concert business hit a downturn several years ago. But he also said that a Beethoven performance in May by the Bohuslav Martinu orchestra was one of the worst he had ever witnessed. "It was terrible," he said. "I wanted to dive under my seat."'
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/05/arts/music/05tibo.html Review of opera Médée performance. "It is a working proposition in this city that those with enough enterprise to put on operas like this will never have the resources to do them properly. Mr. Tiboris's effort — with a good orchestra and the strong Russian Chamber Chorus of New York in front of him — brought us something literate, comprehensible if not always terribly elegant. It is a seller's market. Listeners take what they can get and are grateful."
http://www.leagle.com/decision/In%20NYCO%2020110125362 2010 Decision in lawsuit, MidAMERICA PROD., INC. v. DERKE 601381/2008. Tiboris sued Derke and Griffith, who worked for MidAmerica until their 2008 resignation, over alleged misuse of confidential information and other claims. Some but not all claims were dismissed. Derke and Griffith went on to found Distinguished Concerts International New York (DCINY), a rival concert promoter.
Content analysis: in searching the New York Times archives for Peter Tiboris mentions, the most recent performance review is dated 2006. I expect that if Tiboris was primarily notable as a conductor, there would be more.