Music
1937 results
Page 129

Boston Symphony at Tanglewood: A Romantic mixed bag
What Sarah Chang could learn from Yuja Wang
Romanticism in music has had its ups and downs. A recent weekend of Boston Symphony Orchestra concerts at Tanglewood suggests that much of its success depends on the nature of the performance.

Articles
5 minute read

Philadelphia Orchestra on the brink
When musicians leave, who's responsible?
Add trumpeter David Bilger to the growing roster of Philadelphia Orchestra musicians leaving for more secure if not greener pastures. But the executive and board leadership should walk the plank instead.

Articles
3 minute read

Allen Krantz revives Wencelas Matiegka
Reviving the guitar (with a little help from the Internet)
Beethoven's contemporary Wencelas Matiegka wrote 11 solos for guitar that were forgotten after his death. Now, thanks to the Internet and the guitarist/arranger Allen Krantz, they've been resuscitated.

Articles
4 minute read

Menotti's "The Consul' at Princeton
A Cold War surprise
I had begun to believe that Menotti's The Consul was an unworthy relic of an outdated era. In Princeton last month, to my astonishment, it demonstrated both dramatic and musical strength.

Articles
4 minute read

Russian National Orchestra with gymnasts at the Mann
Musical muscle
Cirque de La Symphonie is a troupe of aerialists, acrobats and tricksters who perform with classical orchestras. In our visual age, what better way to stimulate fresh interest in serious music?
Articles
3 minute read

Wister Quartet's "Summer Bits and Pieces'
Shorthanded in Fairmount Park
The Wister Quartet, reduced to a trio, responded by showcasing the overlooked talents of its three remaining members.

Articles
3 minute read

How today's orchestras succeed
Earth to Philadelphia Orchestra: It's the Internet, stupid
While the Philadelphia Orchestra struggles in bankruptcy, many major orchestras around the world are flourishing. These “21st-Century orchestras” have seized the marketing and PR possibilities of the Internet in imaginative ways that have so far eluded the timid Philadelphians.
Articles
5 minute read
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Dolce Suono at Laurel Hill
High-level High Baroque
The Dolce Suono Trio manages a successful hop between 20th Century America and 18th Century Europe.

Articles
4 minute read

Lenape Chamber Ensemble's 25th anniversary concerts
The evolving Western mind, in three pieces
For its 25th anniversary concerts, the Lenape Chamber Ensemble offers a quick lesson in modern sensibility: The line from Haydn to Dvorak to Shostakovich defines the ascent of individuality, self-consciousness and inner conflict in Western thought.

Articles
4 minute read

"Pirates of Penzance' in Oregon
Hoisting the Victorians, Oregon-style
The Oregon Shakespeare Festival, in its 76th year, has discovered new territory: Gilbert and Sullivan. In The Pirates of Penzance, the Festival demonstrates that lampooning Victorian assumptions remains as relevant as ever.
Articles
4 minute read