Music
1944 results
Page 101

Met’s misguided new ‘Eugene Onegin’
If it ain't broke....
The Metropolitan Opera’s new production of Eugene Onegin is full of innovations, almost all of them detrimental.

Articles
4 minute read

Orchestra plays Britten, Strauss and Mahler
Clothes make the music man
Oboist Richard Woodhams took the stage in a tailored blue shirt, worn outside his pants— It symbolizes a change in attitude— a signal that the Philadelphia Orchestra understands its need to experiment and adapt.

Articles
4 minute read

Yannick leads Beethoven’s Ninth (2nd review)
Yannick leaps off a musical cliff
Yannick Nézet-Séguin is emerging as an artist of notable imagination and daring. In the final movement of Beethoven’s Ninth he was maybe a little too daring.
Articles
3 minute read

Yannick leads Beethoven’s Ninth (1st review)
In the quest for goose bumps, size matters
Yannick-Nézet Séguin’s version of Beethoven’s Ninth inadvertently demonstrated that the same work can be performed in radically different ways. He made the most of the Philadelphia Orchestra’s major asset: Its size.

Articles
4 minute read

Opera Philadelphia’s ‘Nabucco’ (2nd review)
The mightiest man on Earth? (and other flaws in Verdi’s Nabucco)
Nabucco’s characters lack depth, and the music is less accomplished than what Verdi would write just a few years later. So director/designer Thaddeus Strassberger was indeed clever to mount this Nabucco as it might have been performed in Italy in the 1840s.

Articles
4 minute read

Opera Philadelphia’s ‘Nabucco’ (1st review)
Jehovah vs. Baal, then and now
Verdi’s dramatically clunky Nabucco was a broadly drawn metaphor for Austria’s domination of Italy. Thaddeus Strassberger constructs a play around a play in an effort to mask some of the drama’s weaknesses. Its virtues include a fiery new soprano and a final moment of genuine theatrical magic.
Articles
4 minute read

Philadelphia Orchestra’s Tchaikovsky opening
Back to the future with Yannick and Anne-Sophie
What have the Russians done for us lately? Well, Tchaikovsky is timeless, as the violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter reminded us on opening night.

Articles
2 minute read

Orchestra 2001’s opening weekend (2nd review)
Young composer, astonishing head
Sometimes I dread poems set to music. But when it works, it’s art. Chris Rogerson's Fishing was one of three new works, each giving a prominent role to the keyboard.
Articles
5 minute read

Orchestra 2001’s opening weekend (1st review)
Confronting death (and Utah, too)
Orchestra 2001 opened its season with two moving glimpses at family life and a less rewarding visit to Utah’s national parks.

Articles
5 minute read

Chamber Orchestra plays Beethoven and Mendelssohn
Lighter and brighter?
This kind of Chamber Orchestra concert inevitably raises a question: Do we hear anything we wouldn’t hear in a big orchestra performance?

Articles
4 minute read