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  • In Durance Vital - Part III

    More Riches for Vintage Listeners of Americana

    By: David Wilson - Jun 18th, 2011

    Here are four more examples of Cd's to include in your treasured collection of mostly contemporary releases by mostly surviving veterans of the long lost '60s folk scene. May they please you as much as they do me. While preparing to write about this latest batch of CD’s from musicians with artistry rooted in the ‘60s metro-Boston folk scene, I became aware of something that had previously escaped me.

  • Eagle Hill Cultural Center, Gilbert Players

    Bold Experiment in Music and Perception

    By: David Wilson - Jun 17th, 2011

    Can opera, once the music of the people overcome its current elitist reputation and again win the hearts of rustic audiences? Together these folk hope to find the answer is yes! Greater Worcester Opera, the new name for what was once known as Worcester Opera Works experiments this coming Thursday evening, June 23rd by taking their recent performance success of two comic classics out to the hinterlands for an encore.

  • The Boston Early Music Festival's Niobe

    At the Mahaiwe in Great Barrington June 24 and 25

    By: David Bonetti - Jun 16th, 2011

    Sleek early music superstar Philippe Jaroussky stars in operatic rarity as King of Thebes; foxy Amantha Forsythe calls up Joan Collins as his duplicitous wife Niobe. Great singing and staging can't safe dramatically inert work. The opera will be staged at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center in Great Barrington on June 24 and 25.

  • Tanglewood Offers Special Deals

    Affordable Ways to Hear Great Music

    By: BSO - Jun 07th, 2011

    During the 2011 season, June 25-September 4, Tanglewood is offering a number of ticket programs designed to give visitors and Berkshire residents a wide variety of options when planning their visit to the BSO’s summer home. Ticket deals and programs include free tickets to children and young adults 17 and under and discounted tickets for students 18 and over.

  • Boston Early Music Festival Returns

    Festival Presents 2 Baroque Operas and 15 Concerts Plus More

    By: David Bonetti - Jun 07th, 2011

    Early music groups from around the globe converge on Beantown. Exciting French countertenor Philippe Jaroussky stars in opera centerpiece, "Niobe, Regina di Tebe." Festival reprises 2009 hit, Handel's "Acis and Galatea. Plus more!

  • Tanglewood Announces Changes

    Charles Dutoit Leads Opening Night Gala

    By: BSO - May 29th, 2011

    The Boston Symphony Orchestra has announced a new conductor lineup for five of the BSO’s 21 concerts to take place during the 2011 Tanglewood season. These represents concerts originally scheduled for James Levine. For reasons of health he has withdrawn from joining the orchestra this summer.

  • Ron DellaChiesa Three

    Lennie's and Sandy's

    By: Ron DellaChiesa and Charles Giuliano - May 29th, 2011

    In the conclusion of the dialogue with Ron DellaChiesa he discusses the North Shore jazz clubs Lennie's on the Turnpike, run by Lennie Sogaloff and Sandy's Jazz Revival in Beverly the club of Sandy Berman. For the past couple of years he has been working on the soon to be released book Radio My Way.

  • Tom Paxton At The Colonial

    Setting Fire to Our Imaginations

    By: David Wilson - May 25th, 2011

    Tom’s Colonial Theatre appearance this Saturday past was more than just a concert. It was a reunion and a celebration of the mutual respect with which Paxton and the Pittsfield fire brigade hold each other.

  • Ron DellaChiesa WGBH DJ Two

    Dawn Patrol in Boston's Jazz Clubs

    By: Ron DellaChiesa and Charles Giuliano - May 23rd, 2011

    WGBH DJ, Ron DellaChiesa spun the platters for his show Music America by day and hung out with the jazz greats at Boston's jazz clubs. Recalling the great artists who performed at Lulu White's in the South End, The Merry Go Round room in the Copley Plaza Hotel, Lennie's on the Turnpike, Sandy's Jazz Revival in Beverly and Fenton Hollander's Jazz Cruises in Boston Harbor.

  • Joy Kills Sorrow Sparkles At TCAN

    And Brightens Up A Dreary Friday Night

    By: David Wilson - May 23rd, 2011

    ...flavored with motifs from bluegrass, country, western swing, ragtime, classical, jazz, field hollers and contemporary so-called acoustic songwriting with the end result being that they sound like Joy Kills Sorrow and no one else...

  • The Flanders Quartet Enchants in New York

    Miller Theatre of Columbia Presents Great Programs

    By: Susan Hall - May 18th, 2011

    The Miller Theatre of Columbia Univeristy presented the Flanders Recorder Quartet, a superb group that presents music on the recorder. It was some enchanted evening.

  • Ron Della Chiesa Voice of the BSO One

    Early Years at WBCN

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 17th, 2011

    For the past twenty years, WGBH announcer, Ron DellaChiesa has been the Voice of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. In his Music America program he combined many musical forms including jazz, cabaret and film scores. In the early years he started with Arnie Woo Woo Ginsberg at WBOS and with the FM pioneer T. Mitchell Hastings at WBCN. He was with BCN when it made the transition from classical to rock.

  • Natalie Dessay and the Met Orchestra at Carnegie

    Maestro Fabio Luisi Conducts Masterfully

    By: Susan Hall - May 16th, 2011

    A stunning musical afternoon was presented at Carnegie, in a wide-ranging program which included Donizetti and Berg. The cast augurs well for the future of music at the Metropolitan Opera.

  • Ian Bostridge with Les Violons du Roy at Carnegie

    Weaving a Magic Spell

    By: Susan Hall - May 15th, 2011

    The baroque repertoire has never sounded as lively and present as it did in this concert by a great English tenor and the marvelous Violons du Roy under Bernard Labadie.

  • Metropolitan Opera's Die Walkere This Saturday

    The New Production Gleams

    By: Susan Hall - May 12th, 2011

    Die Walkere arrives at the Mahalwe and Clark Theaters this Saturday at noon, a bit earlier than usual because you are getting five and a half hours of opera for your buck. The arrival of the Walkeres at the beginning of Act III, which still photographs can't capture accurately, is well worth the price of the ticket.

  •  Buke and Gass July 16

    Mass MoCA Courtyard Cafe

    By: MoCA - May 12th, 2011

    On Saturday, July 16, at 8 PM Buke and Gass will bring their unique blend of hybrid instrumentation, solid songwriting, dazzling effects and unique harmony to MASS MoCA's Courtyard Cafe.

  • Boston Baroque's Les Indes Galantes Triumphs

    Amanda Forsythe and Aaron Sheehan Shine as Vocal Soloists

    By: David Bonetti - May 10th, 2011

    Boston Baroque director Martin Pearlman contends that Rameau's music is great enough that a full staging is unnecessary. Well ... However, his crack orchestra, soloists, dancers and conducting chops almost made you believe.

  • George Wein Honored by SPAC

    34th Year of Freihofer’s Saratoga Jazz Festival

    By: SPAC - May 09th, 2011

    Jazz impresario George Wein, often referred to as the “father” of modern music festivals, will be honored by Saratoga Performing Arts Center on Saturday, June 25 for his role in founding SPAC’s Freihofer’s Saratoga Jazz Festival, one of the longest-running and most celebrated jazz events in the world.

  • James Levine Out for the Summer

    Cancels Tanglewood and Met Japan Tour

    By: Susan Hall - May 07th, 2011

    The ongoing saga involving the health of BSO and Met Opera artistic director, James Levine, has taken another turn for the worse. After months of speculation he will not appear at Tanglewood this summer. He will not join the Met during its upcoming tour of Japan. He is penciled in to conduct Don Giovanni at the Met on October 13 but let's wait and see.

  • Maria Padilla at Opera Boston

    Donizetti Rarity Features Splendid Singing

    By: David Bonetti - May 07th, 2011

    Donizetti's rarely produced opera "Maria Padilla" serves as a showcase for local diva Barbara Quintiliani, who nails the role as if she learned it in the cradle, but its ridiculous plot and Opera Boston's cheesy production prevents it from being an emotionally satisfying evening.

  • Boston Symphony Orchestra

    2011-2012 Schedule of Performances

    By: BSO - May 06th, 2011

    The Opening Night concert of the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s 2011-12 season will give music fans an extraordinary opportunity to hear Anne-Sophie Mutter in a program of Mozart Violin Concertos Nos. 3 and 5, when she returns to the Symphony Hall stage on Friday, September 30, to make her first BSO appearances in the dual role of conductor and soloist.

  • David Daniels Thrills in Orfeo ed Euridice

    Metropolitan Opera Revives Mark Morris Production

    By: Susan Hall - May 06th, 2011

    Even if you only go to name the hundred characters from the past who sit in a amphitheater above the stage proceedings, this Mark Morris production, with counter tenor David Daniels singing Orfeo, is well worth a visit.

  • Met Summer HD Encores

    Play It Again Sam

    By: Met - May 05th, 2011

    Beginning June 15, the Met will once again present Summer HD Encores, a series of screenings from the groundbreaking Live in HD series, in more than 425 movie theaters across the United States.

  • Verdi's Rigoletto at the Metropolitan Opera

    Zeljko Lucic Stars in the Title Role

    By: Susan Hall - May 04th, 2011

    Verdi considered Rigoletto his greatest opera and in the hands of conductor Fabio Luisi and the singer Zeljko Lucic it is easy to see why. George Bernard Shaw, who didn't like anything, thought Verdi had burned the role of Rigoletto into the music. '

  • Jazz Entrepreneur George Wein Two

    Storyville to Newport

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 03rd, 2011

    When Louis and Elaine Lorillard visited Storyville they approached George Wein about doing something in Newport that summer. Inspired by Tanglewood he came up with the notion of a Jazz Festival. The Lorillards, who later divorced, supported the first seasons from the founding of the Festival in 1954 until the Beer Riot of 1962. Two years later Wein returned until a riot wrecked the festival in 1971.

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