The article suggested that Lisp innovation was dead, not Lisp itself. Written before Clojure was a viable option (per the author's comment in this discussion), that's a pretty easy position to defend.
Whether moving Lisp to the portable JVM and adding concurrency and other features it offers counts as innovation, is a matter for reasonable discussion.
Whether moving Lisp to the portable JVM and adding concurrency and other features it offers counts as innovation, is a matter for reasonable discussion.