Music
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James Levine in Command at Carnegie
Netrebko a Luxury Substitute
By: - Feb 08th, 2015An orchestra like the Met, which nightly accompanies singers, is understandably appreciative of melody. But this was more than melody, It was dialogue and trios, to and fro, forcing a pleasurable attention to the music.
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Muti and Chicago Symphony at Carnegie
Colors for the Ear from Mendelssohn, Debussy and Scriabin
By: - Feb 01st, 2015Muti can masterfully give the big picture. Yet in finding the trees in the forest, he makes the melodic and harmonic parts of a musical work shine like the facets of a big Hope diamond. Understanding better how Muti works the magic only makes hearing his music making with the great Chicago Symphony all the more enjoyable.
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Muti and the Chicago Symphony Part Two
Russian Tribute at Carnegie Hall
By: - Feb 01st, 2015Riccardo Muti is passionate about the place of music in human lives. To him, bringing music to tortured souls is imperative. So his selection of Scriabin's First Symphony, an Ode to Art, and Prokofiev's Cantata based on his film score for Alexander Nevsky is in tune with his mission. The very survival of the Russian soul was on line for both composers. Under Muti's baton, hundreds of superb musicians carried the message at Carnegie Hall.
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Ildar Abdrazakov Seduces Carnegie
Superb Mzia Bakhtouridze at the Piano
By: - Jan 30th, 2015Ildar Abdrazakov made his Carnegie Hall debut in a program that would test any singer's mettle. The evening's pro0gram was divided into two parts. In the first, Glinka, Tchaikovsky and Mussorgky provided a pot pourri of songs and arias that often echoed the keys and tones of the Volga Boat song. Very Russian in color. Sometimes surprisingly un-Russian in brightness and lightness.
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Tanglewood Tickets On Sale
Best Seats Available for 2015
By: - Jan 23rd, 2015Yet again Tanglewood is committed to finding the balance between traditional classical music and evenings featuring popular artists with enough appeal to balance the books. The BSO base audience will embrace the new and youthful conductor Andris Nelsons in his limited appearances. Popular artists including James Taylor, Dianna Krall, and Sheryl Crow return. Idina Menzel and Huey Lewis will be featured in the Shed. The wild card and most interesting booking of the season will present the gonzo pairing of over the top Lady Gaga and the venerable octogenarian Tony Bennett.
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Mozart's Sublime Abduction from the Seraglio
Pforzheim Mounts a Charming Production
By: - Jan 09th, 2015It is easy to see why young talent in Europe travels from small city to small city to sing and conduct opera. First rate production skills, beautiful theatres made to display the human voice, and audiences who appreciate the art form are everywhere to be found. This production of Mozart's first of the five late operas, and the only one written in German, met all of the formidable challenges.
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Boston Baroque's Effervescent New Year's Concert
Arias by Mozart and a Monodrama by his Contemporary Cimarosa
By: - Jan 08th, 2015One of the best traditions of the holiday season is Boston Baroque's New Year's Concert. This year a highlight was a rare performance of Cimarosa's monodrama of a pompous conductor, but young singers Sara Heaton and Andrew Garland also sang Mozart with style and tonal beauty.
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Joe Cocker Remembered
Getting High with Help from Some Friends
By: - Dec 22nd, 2014With arms flailing and legs in a pigeon toe stance the British rocker Joe Cocker was the most unique and remarkable stylist of his generation. Every ounce of this heart and soul was invested in a song.
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Die Walküre (The Valkyries), Act III
New England Conservatory Benefit an Evening in Valhalla
By: - Dec 15th, 2014Jane Eaglen and Greer Grimsley with a student orchestra led by Robert Spano put on an incendiary performance of Act III of Wagner's "Die Walkure." The big question remains: when will Boston get a proper opera house?
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Blues For Christmas - Part II
Blues in the city.
By: - Dec 15th, 2014As Blues performers moved into urban areas, style and technique became more dominant, all too often at the expense of taste. Not so for these four grand albums that reflect many of the variations of the urban hybrids and pay tasteful homage to the adaptability and the complexity of the root forms.
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Blues For Christmas - Part I
Homage to Roots
By: - Dec 14th, 2014Here are four recent releases that honor the roots of the Blues. Each of them would make a worthy addition to the cd shelves of eclectic listeners of music and most Blues fans.
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Macbeth at the Manhattan School of Music
Bloch, Full-Blooded and Uninhibited
By: - Dec 11th, 2014Is opera an intimate art form? Houses in Europe tend to be small or feel intimate. Yet they are just right. Certainly opera has felt right in New York this week with the brilliant, intimate production of El Gato con Botas by the Gotham Chamber Opera and now, as big as Macbeth, in an intimate theatre at the Manhattan School of Music.
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Puss Kicks Up His Boot in Gotham
Ginger Costa-Jackson, a Purring, Prescient Gato
By: - Dec 07th, 2014All eyes are fixed on El Gato, as he virtually vibrates when his slender body is filled with song. Manipulated by three puppeteers, he is a slithering, prancing manipulator himself, entrancing as he bounds across the stage fixing the world to his vision. Puss in Boots is an old tale which holds two morals. One that dress and countenance can carry you far. Puss is a living example. He dons hat and cape and boots and becomes a courtier.
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Two Pergolesi Comedies at BEMF
Sparkling Cast and Expert Instrumentalists Ensure a Fun Time.
By: - Dec 05th, 2014For seven years, the Boston Early Music Festival has put on short, semi-staged operas at the New England Conservatory's Jordan Hall. For this critic, they are a season highlight. Tragic operas by Italian, French and English composers have been featured. This year two Pergolesi comic intermezzi were a delight.
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First Night Saratoga 2015
A Family Friendly, Alcohol-free Event
By: - Dec 05th, 2014See over 70 performing acts in 30 different venues and celebrate a New Year full of arts in Saratoga Springs, NY! First Night is an American cultural event that has a tradition dating back to 1975 in Boston. Today there are about 45 cities around the country who participate in this type of celebration, including in this area, Burlington, VT; Portsmouth, NH; North Hampton, MA; Hartford, CT; Saranac Lake, NY and St. Johnsbury, VT.
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James Conlon Conducts a Brilliant Shostakovich
Lady Macbeth Morphs with Chatterley at the Met
By: - Nov 27th, 2014The production date is 1994. Graham Vick gets the credit. James Conlon conducted then, as he does this fall. The excellence from stem to stern is cause for celebration.
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Frank Martin's Love Potion at Boston Lyric Opera
Rarity Was Intended
By: - Nov 22nd, 2014The BLO's off-site Annex series has proven over the past six years to be its most successful effort. Martin's work tackles a big subject - the fatal love of Tristan and Isolde - but with small forces. The BLO demonstrated that it can be a compelling evening in the theater.
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San Francisco Symphony's Michael Tilson Thomas
Adams, Prokofiev, Ravel Swoop and Soar
By: - Nov 21st, 2014This program had wonderful sound links one piece to the other. Texture, color and sounds were similar although their composers were separated by centuries.
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Tom Reney's 30 Years as WFCR Jazz DJ
NEPR Endowment for Continued Jazz Programming
By: - Nov 20th, 2014Jazz à la Mode has been a staple of WFCR-FM’s offerings –and Tom Reney its only host-- since the station’s inception of jazz programming in 1984. The NPR affiliate, which operates under the aegis of New England Public Radio, recently relocated from the environs of Reney’s alma mater, the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, to become part of the downtown Springfield scene.
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Tanglewood 2015
Let the Games Begin
By: - Nov 13th, 2014Here is the run down on the 2015 Tanglewood Season. Clip and save.
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Joyce DiDonato at Carnegie Hall
Venice is Evoked
By: - Nov 05th, 2014Venice was evoked at Carnegie Hall, by the light, shimmering touch of pianist David Zobel accompanying the great American soprano Joyce Di Donato. Channeling Vivaldi, Rossini, Faure, Head and Hahn, this dynamic duo created an unforgettable evening.
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Peter Sellars Artist of the Year
Musical America Names a Genius
By: - Nov 04th, 2014The idea for "The Death of Kllinghoffer: came from Sellars. He directed the St. Matthew Passion" with the Berlin Philharmonic. At Santa Fe where he has directed he roams the grounds hugging everyone. A warm, brilliant man. He deserves all of his awards.
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Revisiting San Francisco Opera
Tosca and Partenope Evoke Vivid Memories
By: - Nov 01st, 2014The two operas I saw on consecutive nights at the San Francisco Opera, Puccini's "Tosca" - one of the genre's true hits - and Handel's "Partenope," a rarity - show that the company has the ambition to represent the full range of the operatic repertory, often featuring major vocal and directorial stars.
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The Death of Klinghoffer Arrives at the Met
John Adams' Controversial Opera is Smashing
By: - Oct 25th, 2014Months of protesting, picketing and angry letters in the opinion pages of newspapers heralded the first Metropolitan Opera production of John Adams' The Death of Klinghoffer. The production is first rate. The drama compelling. Sets, lighting, singing, the chorus, all top fight. Since the first production of the opera in 1991 there have been no protests, until some citizens of New York rose up this year.
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Abdullah Ibrahim/Dollar Brand at Carnegie
Soulful Marabi of South Africa Lofts in New York
By: - Oct 19th, 2014Ibrahim has lived through it all. Apartheid and the liberation. He has always performed music of his beloved country, with Miriam Makeba and others. At Carnegie, in repose, he came to terms with the violent, disruptive past of South Africa in peaaceful contemplation.
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