Music
1939 results
Page 125

Hazing scandal at Florida A & M's band
A great college band, if its musicians survive
Florida A & M is justly proud of its Marching 100 band, a famous innovator in band choreography. But a litany of hazing abuses suggests that here's another case of a campus organization that's become bigger than its school.

Articles
4 minute read

Philip Glass's 'Satyagraha' at the Met
Gandhi's humble philosophy (for $345 a ticket)
Mohandas Gandhi understood how to mobilize the oppressed masses against the elites of his day. Philip Glass's Satyagraha, for all its ethereal music and purported veneration of Gandhi, seems designed to alienate the masses while deliberately appealing to an elite niche audience.

Articles
5 minute read

Gardiner and Jurowski: Two period pieces (2nd review)
Authentic period pieces? Ain't no such thing
Sir John Eliot Gardiner led his Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique in an all-Beethoven program on period instruments, followed two days later by Vladimir Jurowski's magisterial reading of Shostakovich's Seventh Symphony. That performance, too, had a period feel, but for quite different reasons.

Articles
8 minute read

Orchestre Révolutionnaire at Verizon Hall (1st review)
Another way to hear Beethoven
When this orchestra plays, the needle is always in the danger zone, lending a bracing, edgy quality to the performances that enhances the truly revolutionary spirit of Beethoven's music.
Articles
4 minute read

AVA's "Tales of Hoffman'
With a little (posthumous) help from Offenbach's friends
The new and more authentic version of Offenbach's Tales of Hoffman resulted in a dramatically improved story as well as melodious music to replace those old bogus tunes that musicologists have expunged.

Articles
5 minute read

Dolce Suono's Holocaust concert
What we lost in the Holocaust
Dolce Suono's Holocaust concert passed the ultimate test for a concert devoted to an emotionally charged historic event.

Articles
5 minute read

Met's "Siegfried' in HD-TV Live
Broad shoulders and a waterfall, too
In Siegfried, Robert Lepage and the Metropolitan Opera have at last come up with a spectacular Ring production that realizes the potential we expected from that director and that company.

Articles
3 minute read

Network For New Music at World Café Live
Can poets and musicians get along?
The Network for New Music presented its first concert at the World Café, surrounded the music with a touch of the era of lung cancer and lengthy tirades against the restraints of middle class society.

Articles
4 minute read

Orchestra's heavyweight Brahms Requiem
Awesome, yes. But what was Brahms trying to say?
Brahms's stirring German Requiem was performed with astonishing power by the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Westminster Choir and two outstanding soloists director-designate Yannick Nézét-Séguin. Yet it raised questions of just how this work should be interpreted and performed.

Articles
3 minute read

Ying Quartet at the Perelman
Three Slavs by four Asians
The Ying Quartet's recital offered a late work of the Tsarist era and a late one of the Soviet period. Plenty of history intervened between them, as the scores made clear, but Dvorák's Piano Quintet in A, Op. 81, which rounded out the program, made for a rousing conclusion, with pianist Menahem Pressler adding his special touch to the youthful ensemble.

Articles
5 minute read