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Reviews
At Wigmore Hall: An Evening of Julius Eastman
Julius Eastman died at 49, homeless and destitute, much of his music lost. Many of his compositions that do survive have been painstakingly reconstructed or transcribed from recordings since his death in 1990. Over the past few years … »
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Divas Open KenCen for a Select Few
The Kennedy Center reintroduced live music in grand style on Sept. 26, when Renée Fleming and Vanessa Williams offered an eclectic, hour-long array of songs for a small, very select audience. The locale was the Opera House, dramatically … »
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LA Phil, Back Onstage at the Bowl
LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles Philharmonic’s perennial ATM machine, the Hollywood Bowl, was forced to close its gates to the public this summer, blowing a gaping hole in the Phil’s budget and dealing a devastating hit to … »
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ENO Launches 8-Day Run of Bohème in a Parking Garage
On Sept. 19 the English National Opera (ENO) presented Europe’s first live, drive-in opera. A parking garage at London’s Alexandra Palace is the venue for an eight-day run of 12 performances of a 90-minute version of Puccini’s … »
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Fabio Luisi Opens Dallas Season, Live with Audience
DALLAS--In a world that might have been, 2000 music lovers would have cheerfully witnessed the opening concert of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra’s 2020-21 season in Meyerson Symphony Center on September 11. They would have seen Fabio Luisi, … »
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Dudamel and the LA Phil Capture Ives's Four Symphonies, in the Nick of Time
It’s a rare to encounter all four symphonies of that cranky, visionary American iconoclast Charles Ives live over the span of just a week. That’s what happened six months ago in Walt Disney Concert Hall, in the last purely symphonic … »
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BOAC's 3rd Virtual Marathon: 6 hours, 11 Premieres
Amid the current artistic doom and gloom, each of Bang on a Can’s three marathons have stood as beacons of light, while also providing psychological insights into where artists, particularly composers and musicians, find themselves in these … »
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Finally, a First Recording of Ethel Smyth's The Prison
There’s a telling photo included in the booklet for the world premiere recording of Dame Ethel Smyth’s The Prison . Taken in 1922 at the inaugural International Society for Contemporary Music Festival in Salzburg, there she stands, … »
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A Well-cast Così Bows in Salzburg
Pondering the state of classical music, especially opera, in a post-Covid world is not a happy pastime. Indeed, one wonders when, if ever, it will again be possible to see operas we want to see—including demanding ones of ample … »
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Salzburg's New Elektra: Dysfunction at Its Most Engaging
While the majority of this year’s summer festivals either pulled back to a handful of chamber concerts or recycled content from previous years, the Salzburg Summer Festival showed considerable grit and determination by announcing a … »
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