NEWS ROUNDUP
News Roundup |
Contests & Awards
|
Industry News
|
People in the News
|
Press Releases
Reviews | Special Reports
Reviews | Special Reports
Industry News
Interlochen and NY Phil: Side by Side in 2022-23
During the 2022-2023 season, the New York Philharmonic and the Interlochen Center for the Arts are planning to forge a collaboration that will represent, in the words of Interlochen President Trey Devey, “a formative experience that … »
Read
Contests & Awards
Just Announced: 2022 Avery Fisher Career Grants
This year’s five Avery Fisher Career Grantees include a saxophonist and a percussionist—the first of either among the 166 recipients in the long tradition of the award, funded and named for the New York Philharmonic Hall’s … »
Read
Industry News
NY Phil's First Season in David Geffen 2.0
Describing next season in the “reimagined” David Geffen Hall as a new beginning, New York Philharmonic President and itinerate concert-hall builder/resurrector Deborah Borda took the stage in the Kaplan Penthouse last night to … »
Read
Reviews
A New Peter Grimes Emerges in Warner's ROH Production
LONDON--The Royal Opera has done well by Britten’s (and Britain’s) most revered opera, and over the years each new production has been indelibly associated with its inaugural fisherman. First was Peter Pears in 1947, not long after … »
Read
Industry News
An English Prof Discovers the Unique Value of Singing
Joe Moran, a professor of English and cultural history at Liverpool John Moores University, loved to sing, and for most of his adult life did so only for his own pleasure. But three years ago, he joined a sea-shanty choir and discovered … »
Read
Reviews
Dudamel and the NY Phil Bring Symphonic Schumann Back Into Vogue
Time was when an integral performance of Schumann’s four symphonies would, as a matter of course, be accompanied by a response to attacks that Schumann lacked ability as a symphonist and, especially, as an orchestrator. In an extreme … »
Read
Reviews
Bernstein & Berg in Paris: Staging Saves Score; Score Saves Staging
PARIS--Reactions to Leonard Bernstein’s late-life output vary according to taste, both ours and his. That goes for his compositions as well as his conducting, since the creative spirit that had wowed the world with a flow of unpretentious … »
Read
Industry News
Our Will to Live: New Book on Music by the Terezín Composers
From 1941 to 1944, more than 142,000 Jews passed through Terezín, a Nazi concentration camp located in a remote Bohemian fortress town en route to Auschwitz. Unlike their ultimate destination, Terezín was not a death camp: It served … »
Read
Reviews
Huang Ruo's Book of Mountains... Baffling but Deeply Engaging
Comprehension was only a nominal objective and not particularly necessary in Book of Mountains & Seas the new stage work by composer Huang Ruo and director/designer Basil Twist that was salvaged from the COVID-cancelled Prototype Festival and … »
Read
Industry News
Odessa's Most Guarded Treasure Stands—for Now
The Odessa Opera and Ballet, the Ukraine’s oldest opera house, has become a center of resistance for this Black Sea port’s efforts to fend off Russian invaders. Built in 1887, it finds itself reprising its role of 80 years ago, when … »
Read




FEATURED JOBS

RENT A PHOTO


