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  • Ensemble Connect at Weill Recital Hall

    Venice of the 17th Century Played and Sung

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 21st, 2017

    Carnegie Hall includes in their celebration of Venetian music a group of young artists, Ensemble Y. Instrumentalists and singers gave great pleasure in baroque music.

  • Carousel at Coral Gables

    Rodgers and Hammerstein Musical Soars at Actors Playhouse

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 20th, 2017

    Musical theater at its best in Actors Playhouse' "Carousel" with a winning all-around production in Coral Gables.

  • Authentic Bouillabaisse

    Visiting Villefranche-sur-Mer

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 20th, 2017

    Yet again my paella was a hit with our guests. We talked about the expensive key ingredient of saffron. The next time I want to make Bouillabaisse. But I doubt that I can match that first encounter decades ago in the charming cove of Villefranche-sur-Mer.

  • Giorgi Samanishvili's Wines Of Georgia

    Georgia Is Home To 8000 Vintages

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Feb 20th, 2017

    Researchers believe that wine originated in the country of Georgia. The country has had over 8000 Vintages and over 500 indigenous grape varieties,

  • A Jonathan Biss Carnegie Master Class

    What's in a Note?

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 19th, 2017

    Master classes give musicians a chance for deep listening to their performance and listeners a deeper understanding of music. Jonathan Biss is working on late compositions of composers. He thinks about near-end-of-life art. In it, he finds particular richness as he looks at the singular note, its overtones, and harmonics and chromaticism. These elements he finds drive excellent interpretations.

  • Dorrance Dazzles at the Guggenheim

    Bringing the Art of Tap Dance to a Museum

    By: Deborah Heineman - Feb 19th, 2017

    Michelle Dorrance proves once again that the “Genius” award she received in 2015 for her tap-dancing brilliance (the same year as Lin-Manuel Miranda received his for “Hamilton”) is abundantly deserved!

  • Cappella Mediterranea's Monteverdi at Carnegie

    Man's Damnation and Glory in Musical Poetry

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 18th, 2017

    Cappella Meiterranea seduces with the wit and wisdom of Claudio Monteverdi swirling in voices and period instruments. Conducted from a bar stool by artistic director Leonardo García Alarcón, the angels and devils of history emerged from the wonderful voices of the group.

  • Beethoven and Mahler at the NY Philharmonic

    Inon Barnatan Graces the Concerto

    By: Djurdjija Vucinic - Feb 17th, 2017

    Manfred Honeck conducted the New York Philharmonic in Beethoven's first Piano Concerto and Gustsv Mahler's First Symphony. Beethoven’s was actually the second and a big leap forward from his first. Mahler’s took the world by storm, featuring nature, folk and funeral music and an expansion of orchestral sound from its time binds into space.

  • By the Bog of Cats in Chicago

    Marina Carr’s 1998 Play at The Artistic Home

    By: Nancy Bishop - Feb 17th, 2017

    By the Bog of Cats is a bit of Irish Gothic laced with some Greek tragedy and it’s on stage now at The Artistic Home, one of Chicago’s fine storefront theaters, located in the Noble Square neighborhood. Marina Carr’s 1998 play is set in a ghostly bog in the Irish midlands.

  • Berkshire Theatre Group 2017

    Million Dollar Quartet and Music Man on Tap

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 16th, 2017

    BTG is expanding its 2017 summer festival offerings, including The Music Man and the Million Dollar Quartet, Arsenic and Old Lace, as well as two productions by playwrights, Edward Albee's At Home at the Zoo (Zoo story) and David Auburn's Lost Lake.

  • 2017 Solid Sound Festival Update

    Musical Lineup Set for MASS MoCA June 23-25

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 16th, 2017

    The musical lineup for the 2017 Solid Sound Festival, which takes place June 23-25 at MASS MoCA in North Adams, MA, has been revealed. Let the games begin.

  • August Wilson's Jitney

    Last of Wilson's Century Cycle now on Broadway

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 16th, 2017

    Respected Broadway producer Ron Simons steers 'Jitney' to Broadway. All other August Wilson 'Century Cycle Plays' Have Appeared on the Great White Way.

  • The Science of Vaccinations

    Scratch and Sniff

    By: Jimmy Midnight - Feb 15th, 2017

    Polio is widely regarded, along with smallpox, as vaccination’s other “unmistakable success,” and in recent years the World Health Organization has pronounced it confined to Afghanistan and Pakistan.

  • Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks

    Annenberg Theatre, Palm Springs

    By: Jack Lyons - Feb 15th, 2017

    Insightfully written by Richard Alfieri, and inventively directed by Larry Raben, “Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks”, at the Annenberg Theatre, Palm Springs, stars Loretta Swit as Lily and David Engle as Michael.

  • Expressions by Shawn Abramowitz

    At California's Desert Ensemble Theatre

    By: Jack Lyons - Feb 15th, 2017

    “Expressions”, marks Shawn Abramowitz’s debut as a playwright, who also directs the powerful drama now performing on the Pearl Mc Manus Stage at the Palm Springs Woman’s Club. He has been singled out for Desert Theatre League honors for Best Actor and Best Supporting actor in “A Number” in 2016, and for “Family Meetings.”

  • Straight White Men at Steppenwolf

    Playwright Young Jean Lee Directs in Chicago

    By: Nancy Bishop - Feb 15th, 2017

    Young Jean Lee’s new play, which she directs at Chicago's Steppenwolf Theatre, presents the existential crisis of being a straight white man, but rejecting its rule-the-world requirements. The play is very smart and funny and the audience laughs throughout.

  • Jordi Savall Plays Venetian Music in Boston

    Influence of Venetian Dance Music on Europe

    By: David Bonetti - Feb 13th, 2017

    With more than 230 CDs and a rigorous touring schedule, Jordi Savall's "Hesperion XXI" is one of early music's most popular groups, sure to fill concert halls all over the world, especially in Boston a hotbed of the broad field of "early" music. In recent years, Savall has been focused on how music is transmitted between cultures over time, and this lively concert surveyed how Venetian dance music influenced music in France, Germany, England and Spain.

  • Tchaikovsky Befriended by New York Philharmonic

    Joshua Gersen Conducts with Brilliant Restraint

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 11th, 2017

    The program began with Francesca da Rimini, a symphonic fantasy. The music seemed more likely to have been composed in 1976 than in 1876. The buzzing strings, dissonance and mixed instrumental textures are thoroughly modern. Yet the story is eternal: a woman falls in love with her husband’s brother and descends to hell. Tchaikovsky adopted this as program music from Dante. The whirlwind which sweeps up the musical story prepares us for a similar whirlwind in the fourth movement of the Pathetique.

  • Between Riverside And Crazy in Coral Gables

    Stephen Adly Guirgis’ Pulitzer Prize Dramedy

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 11th, 2017

    The circumstances in “Between Riverside and Crazy” sound painfully familiar to what’s happening today, but Guirgis didn’t simply base his work on a recent incident. Guirgis has a keen ear for dialogue from the rough and tumble streets. His gritty, even vulgar dialogue sings as a kind of poetry from the hood.

  • Williamstown Theatre Festival 2017

    Broadway in the Berkshires

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 10th, 2017

    The Williamstown Theatre Festival 2017 Summer Season, the 63rd Season for the Tony® Award-winning theatre company, will include four world premieres, a new musical, and the first production of a WTF commissioned artist.

  • Carnegie Hall Presents the Tallis Scholars

    St. Ignatius Loyola Offers the Acoustics

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 09th, 2017

    Carnegie Hall is offering a festival of Music from the Venetian Republic. At St. Ignatius Loyola, one of New York City’s acoustic treasures, the Tallis Scholars offered Venetian Voices, singing in split choirs, both to provide more vocal lines and to speak to each other when composers asked.

  • Vote for North Adams

    Contest for $500,000 Grant

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 09th, 2017

    North Adams has bsen selected as one of five finalists for Main Street Season Two. Please help by casting a vote once a day from now through February 16. The prize for the Small Business Revolution contest is $500,000.

  • Northern Greece: Part Two

    From the Ionian to the Aegean Sea

    By: Zeren Earls - Feb 08th, 2017

    The highlights of this itinerary range from rock formations with monasteries perched atop the cliffs at Meteora to ancient Macedonian cities of Philippi and Amphipolis, the former distinguished as the first place Apostle Paul visited in Europe. The modern cities of Kavala and Thessaloniki enhance the experience with museums, monuments, and antiquities in addition to a vibrant urban life.

  • Susanna Phillips More Than a Beautiful Voice

    Demonstrated How to Give a Song Recital

    By: David Bonetti - Feb 08th, 2017

    Young American soprano, Susanna Phillips, has what it takes - a beautiful voice, a charming manner and a fierce intelligence. Her Celebrity Series concert, "Women's Lives and Loves," traced the female condition through song. It could serve as a seminar in how to build a vocal recital.

  • Jennifer Haley’s The Nether

    Chicago's A Red Orchid Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Feb 08th, 2017

    Playwright Jennifer Haley is the author of plays including Froggy, Neighborhood 3 and Breadcrumbs. Her subject matter focuses on ethics in virtual reality and the impact of technology on human relationships. The Nether was developed at the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center’s National Playwrights Conference in 2011.

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