Share

Music

  • No Love Songs

    Goodspeed’s Terris Theatre in Chester

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 19th, 2024

    During the 80 minutes or so, we hear 11 songs. Most are duets between the two characters – Jessie and Lana. Jessie and Lana are fictionalized versions of Falconer and Wilde and their story. From the first meeting, when Lana goes to a bar and meets the older Jessie through a courtship of sorts, the birth of their son, and Jessie’s departure on a US tour with a band, where they are the backup/opening act.

  • Henze's Prince of Homburg in Frankfurt

    Important Composer Gets a Perfect Production

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 22nd, 2024

    Contemporary composers scramble for relevant subject matter. Opera companies overlook repertoire which is excellent and seldom staged. As the 100th anniversary of Hans Werner Hene's birth approaches in 2026, his work, produced in timeless fashion, offers fresh opportunities. Frankfurt Oper shows the way.

  • Tristan & Isolde

    San Francisco Opera's Fine Production of Wagner

    By: Victor Cordell - Oct 25th, 2024

    When composing this opera, Richard Wagner was obsessed with love fanned by his infatuation for the married poet Mathilde Wesendonck and death driven by the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer. The two existential forces are melded in the opera's thematic thrust "liebestod" (love-death), which is also the dominant leitmotif in the music. While the orchestral score soars, the dramatic action is grounded, yet it remains a pioneer of modern music.

  • Frederick Douglass Comes to Hudson Hall

    Anthony Knight Jr. Combines Negro Spirituals with Douglass' Text

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 25th, 2024

    Hudson Hall in the Hudson Hall Opera House will present No Cowards in Our Band, an intertwined stage piece that combines nine spirituals with the reciting of original text by Frederick Douglass. In this drama,  an aging and contemplative Frederick Douglass (1818-1895). considers the social, economic, and political ramifications of slavery and the Civil War and their impact on the future of the United States. 

  • Jersey Boys

    ACT-CT in Ridgefield,

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 29th, 2024

    The book – the story of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons – by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice is one of the things that sets it above many jukebox shows. Each of the original members of the group narrates a part of the story. This allows for different perspectives on the group’s history and personalities.

  • The Matchbook Magic Flute

    Mary Zimmerman's Adaptation of Mozart's Masterpiece

    By: Victor Cordell - Nov 03rd, 2024

    Aided by bird catcher Papageno, Prince Tamino sets out to rescue abducted Pamina, whom he has fallen in love with based only on a portrait. His quest faces the challenge of three trials and the threat of the Queen of the Night, mother of Pamina.

  • Ghost Quartet

    A Spooky Look into the Afterlife Through Song

    By: Victor Cordell - Nov 05th, 2024

    Oakland Theater Project presents Dave Malloy's 23 dramatic vignettes about love, loss, whiskey, and the afterlife built into a song cycle. Calling on all manner of musical idioms, but with the constant of a mournful cello, it engages both musically and dramatically.

  • David Lang's Little Match Girl Returns

    Annual Holiday Event at the Crypt

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 16th, 2024

    David Lang's Pulitzer Prize-winning Passion opera The Little Match Girl will be performed in its original form with four artists both singing and playing instruments at the Crypt in New York.

  • Berlin Philharmonic Rocks Carnegie Hall

    Kirill Petrenko Brings Fresh Ear to Music

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 20th, 2024

    The Berlin Philharmonic completed a three-day visit to Carnegie Hall in New York. The world’s greatest orchestra and its greatest conductor, Kirill Petrenko, did not disappoint.  The programming combined an anniversary  (the 200th birthday of Anton Bruckner), with fresh visits to favorites like Anton Dvorak’s 7th Symphony and a Violin Concerto by the film composer Erich Korngold.

  • A Thousand Ships

    Oakland Theater Project World Premiere

    By: Victor Cordell - Dec 20th, 2024

    Distinguished playwright Marcus Gardley creates an homage to the Black community in Oakland that he grew up in, and particularly to strong women and their contributions. Adeline and Laney are transplants from the South, and their beauty salon is an institution for decades before the women face economic and personal challenges.

  • Former Ladies of The Supremes

    A Nostalgic Concert at Marin Jazz

    By: Victor Cordell - Dec 21st, 2024

    Since 1986, this group has revived the music of the most successful girl group of all time. Memorable songs written by the great team of Holland, Dozier, and Holland and sung by this charming group take us back to 1964 and the years following.

  • Prototype Festival to Begin New Year

    New York's Most Adventuresome Program Music

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 28th, 2024

    The Prototype Festival produced by Beth Morrison starts the avant-garde music world off from January 9 to 19. One work has been around the city in various forms for a while.  Black Lodge dives into William Burroughs’ life.  Queer, the film starring Daniel Craig, has brought Burroughs mainstream attention.  The film with music by David T. Little, wrestles with movies as canned opera.

  • Igor Levit Performs at Carnegie Hall

    Bach Brahms and Beethoven

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 13th, 2025

    Igor Levit, a deeply thoughtful musician, gave voice to Bach, Brahms and Beethoven at Carnegie Hall.  Each of these composers was represented by a seemingly uncharacteristic work that revealed unfamiliar approaches.

  • Komische Oper, Berlin

    Robinson Crusoe

    By: Angelika Jansen - Jan 15th, 2025

    The concert version of the light opera by Jacques Offenbach of the Komische Oper, Berlin left wishes open for a full fledged opera performance. The stage setting, at their temporary house located at the Schiller Theater in the Bismarckstrasse in Berlin, seemed at bit crowded. Nevertheless.....

  • Tanglewood 2025

    Best of the Berkshires

    By: BSO - Jan 30th, 2025

    In July, BSO Music Director and Head of Conducting at Tanglewood Andris Nelsons leads ten programs and two TLI/TMC Art of Conducting master classes in a schedule that shines a spotlight on a wide spectrum of musical guests and the festival’s rich tradition of presenting summertime concerts at their best since 1937.   

  • Conrad Tao Alights in Carnegie Hall

    Premier Keyboard Artist Performs Debussy and His Own Works

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 30th, 2025

    Conrad Tao takes our inner ear on new journeys in a program at Carnegie Hall on January 31. The first notes we’ll hear are often said to be Claude Debussy making fun of Carl Czerny.  Czerny’s exercises are of course where most of us begin our piano journeys.  Thumping away at scales, we don’t learn to appreciate the sounds that can emerge from the instrument. We don’t coax.   We hammer.  Tao will coax sound from piano keys and Lumatone hexagons.

  • Seong-Jin Cho Records Ravel

    Released by Deutsche Grammophon

    By: BSO - Feb 04th, 2025

    Ravel: The Piano Concertos, in which the pianist is joined by the Boston Symphony Orchestra and its Music Director Andris Nelsons, comes out digitally and on CD on February 21. A deluxe edition presenting the complete recordings will be issued digitally and as a 3-CD box set on May 2. Vinyl versions of the two individual albums will be released later this year. The Piano Concerto in G’s central Adagio assai is available to stream/download beginning  February 7, while the Menuet sur le nom d’Haydn will be released in advance of the deluxe edition, on March 7, the exact anniversary of Ravel’s birth. 

  • Phil Kline Surprises with a Song Cycle

    Meet the Ghost of Isabella Stewart Gardner

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 12th, 2025

    On Sunday, February 23 at 1:30 p.m., the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum presents the world premiere of ghost story, a song cycle commissioned from composer/lyricist Phil Kline. It’s inspired by the life and times of Isabella Stewart Gardner.

  • Komische Oper, Berlin - Pferd Frisst Hut

    Horse Eats Hat, a Comic Opera Extravaganza

    By: Angelika Jansen - Feb 13th, 2025

    On February 8, 2025 was opening night for "Pferd Frisst Hut" (Horse Eats Hat), the hilarious and wildly entertaining comic opera extravaganza written and composed by Herbert Groenemeyer for the Komische Oper, Berlin. Sold out and enjoyed by the audience, this musical work, coproduced by the Theater Basel, allowed the entire ensemble to go wild on stage.

  • La Sonnambula

    Bellini's Bel Canto Masterpiece About a Sleepwalker

    By: Victor Cordell - Feb 16th, 2025

    Amina's sleepwalking incident creates a scandal when she's seen at the lodgings of a visiting Count. Fiance Elvino cancels his planned nuptials with Amina, but will truth and love win out? Hint: this opera is not a tragedy.

  • Bluebeard's Castle

    Opera San Jose Excels in Production of Bartok's Gem

    By: Victor Cordell - Feb 17th, 2025

    Count Bluebeard's new wife, Judith, arrives at his castle to find seven doors that lead from the great room. Opening each door reveals something about Bluebeard's character and history. The findings are not all that she had hoped for.

  • Anne Bogart To Direct Carousel

    Boston Lyric Opera

    By: BLO - Feb 18th, 2025

     Through a contemporary lens, Anne Bogart says the show’s depictions of domestic violence, cycles of poverty and crime, suicide, and toxic masculinity still resonate strongly. “The treatment of these issues in Carousel may seem outdated by modern standards, but its artistic merits – and willingness to tackle complex human actions – make it a thought-provoking work within the classical music theater canon."

  • Marin Alsop Debuts with the Berlin Phil

    Berin Philharmonie Explores Loss of Paradise in Music

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 23rd, 2025

    Marin Alsop debuts with the Berlin Philharmonie in Berlin. Leading the Berlin Philharmonic for the first time, she chose a special, continent-spanning program. The world premiere of Day Night Day by Finnish composer Outi Tarkiainen refers to the songs of the Sami, the indigenous people of northern Finland and revolves around the northern lights and ice that covers and protects the local landscape. The BSO was a commissioner.

  • Jesus Christ Superstar

    A Super Production by Berkeley Playhouse

    By: Victor Cordell - Feb 25th, 2025

    Jesus Christ's betrayal and crucifixion as rendered by Andrew Lloyd Weber and Tim Rice's stands as one of the long running musicals in history. To many theatergoers, it is simply a beautifully crafted work with fine music and intense drama. Yet to some, it teems with controversy as the character representations don't fit in traditionalists' boxes.

  • Dalia Stasveska Debuts at the Berlin Philharmonic

    Human Impact on Nature Explored in Music

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 01st, 2025

    Dahlia Stasevska, known for her commanding presence and elegant, balletic gestures, recently debuted with the Berlin Philharmonic. The response was enthusiastic. Her tenure as Principal Guest Conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra, extended through 2027, reflects her growing prominence in the classical world.

  • << Previous Next >>