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  • Creators Discuss Nixon in China at the Metropolitan Opera

    What to Expect in HD Telecast

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 11th, 2011

    Any ideas that Nixon in China is inaccessible were dismissed by five collaborators on this great American opera which premiered two decades ago in Houston. The Metropolitan Opera has mounted a Convent Garden production. It will be broadcast live in HD on February 12.

  • Hot Tuna Warms Cold Berkshire Night

    Gutsy Blues at the Colonial in Pittsfield

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 10th, 2011

    Hot Tuna Blues sizzled at the Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield. It launched a busy Valentine celebration in the Berkshires. Barrington Stage is presenting a weekend long V Day Cabaret. Shakespeare & Company is opening a winter run of Mystery of Irma Vep. Williamstown Theatre Festival announces its season on Friday and hosts a reading of a Neal Simon play on Monday at the Clark. The Met Live in HD will screen Nixon in China on Saturday at the Mahaiwe, Beacon and Clark. Here's looking at you sweetheart.

  • Nixon in China at the Metropolitan Opera

    Live in HD February 12

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 07th, 2011

    Nixon in China by John Adams and directed by Peter Sellars has traveled the world for twenty years and finally arrives at the Metropolitan Opera. It is wonderfully entertaining and at local theaters on February 12. In the Berkshires the opera will be screened Live in HD at the Mahaiwe in Great Barrington, Beacon in Pittsfield and in Williamstown at the Clark Art Institute.

  • Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor

    Emerson's Cutler Majestic Theatre

    By: David Bonetti - Feb 05th, 2011

    The singing, the sine qua non of bel canto opera, was terrific – full-blooded and deeply committed. The international cast of soloists sang their hearts out for an unfortunately small audience. There were more than a few moments of thrilling vocalism.

  • Viktor Ullmann’s The Emperor of Atlantis or Death Quits

    Boston Lyric Opera Mordant, Bitterly Humorous

    By: David Bonetti - Feb 02nd, 2011

    Viktor Ullmann’s “The Emperor of Atlantis or Death Quits” at Boston Lyric Opera is a wry, mordant, bitterly humorous contribution to the theater of the absurd. (Indeed, what could be more absurd than writing an opera in a concentration camp?) And, against all odds, it is deeply humane and absurdly hopeful. We who are about to die, serenade you.

  • Herb Snitzer's Glorious Days and Nights

    A Jazz Memoir

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 29th, 2011

    The book by Herb Snitzer Glorious Days and Nights: A Jazz Memoir includes a stunning portfolio of 84, vintage, black and white portraits and performance shots of mostly deceased jazz musicians. There is also a compelling and richly anecdotal narrative of a life, he was born in Philadelphia in 1932, chronicling America's greatest original art form. Along the way he was an editor of the seminal publication Metronome.

  • The Collegiate Chorale's Rousing State of the Union

    James Bagwell Conducts at Alice Tully Hall

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 27th, 2011

    While our pols gathered in the well of the House of Representatives to listen to the state of the union, the Collegiate Chorale made clear that not much has changed about our state of the union since New York was Nieuw Amsterdam.

  • Newport Jazz and Folk Festival Now Non Profit

    Founder George Wein Remains in Charge

    By: Newport - Jan 26th, 2011

    The famed Newport Jazz Festival® and Newport Folk Festival®, held in Newport, RI, since 1954 and 1959 respectively, have returned to their original roots as non-profit events. The Festivals will now be produced under the umbrella of Newport Festivals Foundation, Inc., a newly-formed 501(c)(3) organization. They will still be produced by George Wein and his veteran staff.

  • Hot Tuna at the Colonial Feb 9

    Charlie Musselwhite Also on Bill in Pittsfield

    By: Colonial - Jan 25th, 2011

    Hot Tuna Blues is coming to the Colonial for a one-night only concert on Wednesday, February 9 at 7:30pm. The performance joins Rock and Roll Hall of Famers Hot Tuna (Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady) with Chicago blues icon Charlie Musselwhite and singer-songwriter Jim Lauderdale.

  • Met Orchestra and Levine at Carnegie

    DeYoung and O'Neill Master Mahler

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 24th, 2011

    The connection between Mozart and Mahler is not immediately apparent, but both pieces chosen for Sunday afternoon's program concern farewells. Mozart's Posthorn Serenade celebrated the end of the school year and the departure of students. Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde, the deep sense that the composer had little time to live. Mozart's goodbye was full of musical puns and play, aptly captured by the Maestro and orchestra. The Mahler was sung wrenchingly as the orchestra both set the tone and enriched the songs. The sound at Carnegie is of course incomparable.

  • Tangelwood Rocks

    Earth Wind and Fire and Steely Dan

    By: BSO - Jan 19th, 2011

    Rock and Roll Hall of Fame bands Earth, Wind, and Fire and Steely Dan are being added to the 2011 Tanglewood season line-up. Earth, Wind, and Fire will perform on Saturday, June 25, at 7 p.m. in the Koussevitzky Music Shed as part of the band’s 40th anniversary tour. Steely Dan will perform on Tuesday, July 26 at 7 p.m. in the Shed. Tickets for both events go on sale February 6, 2011.

  • Tanglewood and Mass MoCA Butt Heads

    Wilco and Earth Wind and Fire Conflict on June 25

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 19th, 2011

    The Wilco Solid Sound Festival is set for June 24 to 26 at Mass MoCA. Tanglewood launches its season the following Fourth of July weekend with three dates for perennial favorite James Taylor. In a surprise move Tanglewood has announced a prequel to the Taylor weekend. It will present the vintage soul group Earth Wind and Fire on Saturday, June 25, while Wilco will rock in North Adams. What gives?

  • Opera Boston's Cardillac

    Hindemith's Opera Feb. 25 and March 1

    By: Ariel Petrova - Jan 19th, 2011

    Opera Boston continues its 2010-11 season with the New England premiere of Paul Hindemith’s 1926 opera Cardillac, in a new production starring baritone Sanford Sylvan, at the Cutler Majestic Theatre (219 Tremont St., Boston). Performances take place Feb. 25 and March 1, 2011 at 7:30 p.m. and Feb. 27 at 3 p.m. Sung in German with English titles.

  • Wilco Solid Sound Festival at Mass MoCA

    Tickets for North Adams Event June 24 to 26

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 18th, 2011

    After months of hints and rumors it is now official. The Wilco Solid Sound Festival returns to Mass MoCA in North Adams June 24 to 26. There are many changes and improvements. Unlike last year patrons may now opt for single day tickets which are cheaper than a weekend pass. But there are a limited number of one day tickets so if that's your preference plan to act swiftly.

  • Tosca at the Metropolitan Opera

    Radvanovsky Offers a New and Satisfying Tosca

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 15th, 2011

    Sondra Radvanovsky debuted as Tosca this week at the Met. If the production is still trying to find its legs, the singers are certainly ready to go and wonderful.

  • Renee Fleming Stunning at Carnegie

    Intimate Concert Performance by Opera Diva

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 12th, 2011

    Renée Fleming swept onto the stage at Carnegie Hall on Tuesday January 11. Her long gold dress with pleated skirt and rhinestone shoulder caps dazzled as did her voice. At the end of the evening with a blizzard forecast, she exclaimed surprise that the house was packed, but no one who heard her sing thought it odd at all. "Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stayed this audience…” (Herodotus, it turns out, not McKim, White’s etching on the US Post Office Building).

  • Met HD La Fanciulla del West Jan. 8

    Deborah Voight and Marcello Giordani Star

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 06th, 2011

    The Mahaiwe, Beacon and Clark in the Berkshires will broadcast direct from the Metropolitan Opera this Saturday afternoon. This is the 100th anniversary of the premier of Puccini's opera. It is as exciting today as it was then.

  • Wilco Returns to Mass MoCA June 24 to 26

    Second Annual Solid Sound Festival

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 22nd, 2010

    Mass MoCA can be such a tease. They have been so coy about admitting that the Wilco inspired Solid Sound Festival will return this year in June. It's still not official but mark your calendar for June 24 to 26. Better start making travel plans and hotel reservations asap. North Adams is sure to be swamped with Wilco fans.

  • Lyric Opera of Chicago Snags Renee Fleming

    Fleming Named first Creative Consultant

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 10th, 2010

    Soprano Beverly Sills went on from a brilliant stage career to champion opera and music as a superior administrator. Earlier this year, Renee Fleming dismissed her long time public relations maven, a move which suggested that she was contemplating a change from a heavy duty performing schedule to other activities. The Lyric, a brilliant, consistent ensemble company, picked up on the signals and put together a package that will wrap Renee into Chicago. The Met missed out!

  • The Metropolitan Opera's Don Carlo in HD

    Broadcast Featuring Roberto Alagna Dec. 11

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 08th, 2010

    Verdi's most ambitious opera is both wrenching personal and daring political. The composer worked on the opera for 20 years, and it is hard to imagine Aida, Otello and Falstaff without the insights he gained in his struggle to master the piece. The Met Live in HD broadcast will be seen Saturday at the Mahaiwe, Great Barringtion, Beacon Cinema, Pittsfield and the Clark in Williamstown.

  • Tanglewood 2011

    Full Schedule June 28 to September 4

    By: BSO - Nov 30th, 2010

    Once again James Taylor will be featured with four concerts at Tanglewood this summer. From an all-Italian Opening Night Boston Symphony Orchestra program under the direction of James Levine on July 8, four appearances by living legend Yo-Yo Ma, a Boston Pops Cole Porter tribute led by Keith Lockhart, and the incredibly popular Film Night with John Williams, to the welcome returns of Itzhak Perlman and Christoph Eschenbach and special appearances by favorite artists Joshua Bell, Stephanie Blythe, Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, Christoph von Dohnányi, Kurt Masur, and Peter Serkin to the closing BSO performance of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony under the direction of Lorin Maazel,

  • Britten Enchants at Lyric Opera of Chicago

    Midsummer Night's Dream Wafts By

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 24th, 2010

    Britten and Peter Pears chose Midsummer Night's Dream to reopen their Festival in Aldeburgh. It camps up Shakespeare in a delicious, other-worldly musicscape. Britten’s music is neither tonal nor atonal, but a special musicscape designed for the dream world on stage, a dream within a dream, play within play. Rory Macdonald conducts this Lyric Opera of Chicago production.

  • Dala Enchants at Natick Center for the Arts

    A Standing O From a Sold-out House

    By: David Wilson - Nov 22nd, 2010

    If the Everly Brothers had been sisters... If the Andrews Sisters or the McGuire sisters had been a duo... Dala fulfills the speculation and rouses a full house at the Natick Center of the Arts to their feet.

  • Verdi at Chicago's Lyric Opera

    Megawattage Singing in The Masked Ball

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 19th, 2010

    The Lyric Opera of Chicago has a way with casting. Like theater in Chicago, the company puts up a matchless ensemble that works together to bring life to operas old and new. This production of The Masked Ball (the Lyric prefers the English translation) is a bit of an exception, even though the mega wattage cast is superb throughout and alone worth hearing. Beware retired singers directing.

  • In Durance Vital - Part I

    Recent Recordings From Senior Folkies

    By: David Wilson - Nov 17th, 2010

    To experience artists in top form almost a half century after they first caught your attention is a marvel indeed. I can’t imagine the extent of the dedication and commitment to a craft that is required to be able to do that. The fact that I have at one time or another had personal contact, sometimes brief, sometimes extended, occasionally contentious with most of the principals of the releases listed below only increases my wonder at their durability. I have no bones to pick here and only praise to offer.

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