REVIEWS


Reviews

Russian Pianist Wows the Critic, Mostly

October 28, 2024 | David Patrick Stearns, Musical America
Vladimir Horowitz once said some Chopin miniatures have more content than a Mahler symphony. At her Zankel Hall recital October 22, Berlin-based Russian pianist Yulianna Avdeeva, 39, proved his point. Durable, romantic-era touchstones on the … » Read
 

Reviews

I Tremble Not: Newberry Consort Launches Season

October 28, 2024 | Hannah Edgar, Musical America
CHICAGO— Taking over from any longtime music director can be a daunting task. Their identities can fuse with the organization, marking any successor as an interloper. That hasn’t been so much as a passing worry for Newberry Consort … » Read
 

Reviews

Kedrick Armstrong Launches Oakland Symphony's Season

October 21, 2024 | Sarah Shay, Musical America
First impressions matter. For 30-year-old Kedrick Armstrong , the new music director for the Oakland Symphony, the opening of the new season on Oct. 18, as described in the San Francisco Chronicle , “offered very promising signs.” … » Read
 

Reviews

Ainadamar at the Met: ''See the Music, Hear the Dance.''

October 18, 2024 | George Loomis, Musical America
Ainadamar , Osvaldo Golijov’s elegy for the venerated Spanish poet and playwright Federico García Lorca to a libretto by David Henry Huang, has had a healthy life following an artistically premature world premiere at Tanglewood in … » Read
 

Reviews

New Concert Series Searches for Light Amid the Dark

October 17, 2024 | David Patrick Stearns, Musical America
Who would have thought that the opening of a concert space in a subterranean crypt would be a significant development on the New York music scene? Death of Classical, the organization that presents often-challenging programs in what it describes … » Read
 

Reviews

Revisiting ...Tahiti & A Quiet Place as a Double Bill

October 17, 2024 | Clive Paget, Musical America
LONDON—Leonard Bernstein’s A Quiet Place has a reputation as a problem work. The sequel to his 1952 two-hander Trouble in Tahiti , it explores the repercussions of the turbulent marriage depicted in the earlier work. Badly received at … » Read
 

Reviews

A Masterly New Turn of the Screw Chills to the Bone

October 16, 2024 | Clive Paget, Musical America
LONDON—Benjamin Britten’s The Turn of the Screw may be a masterpiece, but it’s a delicate one, especially with child abuse such a hot button issue today. The composer went about as far as anyone could in 1954 to foreground an … » Read
 

Reviews

LA Phil Introduces Substantial New Cello Concerto to NY

October 16, 2024 | George Loomis, Musical America
Two years remain before Gustavo Dudamel takes over as music director of the New York Philharmonic in 2026, and until then his podium appearances will be infrequent: for the current season, two weeks of subscription concerts plus a third for the … » Read
 

Reviews

At Segerstrom, London Phil Is Outshined by Its Soloist

October 16, 2024 | Taylor Grant, Musical America
A visit by the London Philharmonic and its principal conductor Edward Gardner on Oct. 11 kicked off the 71 st season of the Philharmonic Society of Orange County with a program that featured Shostakovich and Tchaikovsky. [The orchestra comes to … » Read
 

Reviews

M. Pintscher Conducts NY Phil in His neharot

October 15, 2024 | Fred Cohn, Musical America
Matthias Pintscher’s 25-minute tone poem neharot is quite explicitly a piece of program music, one that is governed by its external referent. Written in 2020, the piece is a response to the COVID-19 pandemic; the composer has described it … » Read
 
 

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