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Reviews
Salonen, Philharmonia Premiere Dreamers in SF
BERKELEY, CA--Anticipation couldn’t have been running much higher when Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonia Orchestra of London, arrived in Berkeley last weekend. With three programs on the schedule, Friday evening through Sunday … »
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The Utter Irony and Sad Timeliness of An American Dream
Nothing changes. The bigotry, racism, nativism, and anti-Semitism that provide a basis for composer Jack Perla and librettist Jessica Murphy Moo’s An American Dream remain as real in America today as they were when the nation was at war … »
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Two Song Cycles, One a Post-minimalist Premiere, One an Argento Classic
For the second time in as many days, a Manhattan recital turned into a memorial. Following Anne-Sophie Mutter’s Carnegie Hall concert that concluded as a moving tribute to her late husband André Previn, so the March 13 traversal … »
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Anne-Sophie Mutter Addresses Ghosts Personal and Professional
Hearts must have gone out to Anne-Sophie Mutter at her Carnegie Hall recital on March 12. The first half of her program had a distinctly spectral theme, designed to culminate in the world premiere of Rhode Island-born composer Sebastian … »
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Salonen and the Philharmonia at LincInc: “Lucky, lucky San Francisco.”
Esa-Pekka Salonen’s recently announced move to helm the San Francisco Symphony has been one of the more talked about U.S. music director moves of late. And while New Yorkers have hardly been deprived of seeing him as a guest with this … »
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At St. Paul's Cathedral, a Berlioz Requiem Survives Acoustic Soup
LONDON—In recent years John Nelson has forged a clear, broad pathway through the mighty musical forests of Hector Berlioz. Where Thomas Beecham and Colin Davis had blazed an early trail in repertoire that was seldom performed, the American … »
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Yuja Takes No Prisoners in John Adams's New Concerto
LOS ANGELES—There are two sides to John Adams: the deep-thinking composer who dreams big and takes on weighty issues, and the self-described “trickster” who doesn’t take himself too seriously and likes to come up with … »
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At the NYPhil, A Happy Excursion but a Choppy Pathétique
It’s always gratifying to see a good turnout for new music, and if the line snaking through security at David Geffen Hall on March 6 was anything to go by, Zhao Lin’s Concerto for Pipa, Cello and Orchestra was a highly anticipated … »
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At the Kitchen, Claire Chase's Latest Density
Now and then an artist comes along who charts unfathomable (not to mention unattainable) territory. One of these is flutist Claire Chase, MacArthur “genius” grant recipient, a founder of the International Contemporary Ensemble, … »
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Christie Brings 'Rameau, Master of the Dance' to BAM
William Christie and Les Arts Florissants have been welcome guests at the Brooklyn Academy of Music ever since the 1990s, when they first gave groundbreaking performances there of operatic masterpieces from the French Baroque. So it was last … »
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