Music

1944 results
Page 191
255 jarvi portrait

Orchestra sans Muti

The Orchestra's heralded Muti concerts went on without Muti, but Neeme Järvi proved a most capable replacement. What he lacked in hair power, Järvi made up for in maestro-strokes, eliciting forceful elegance from the full orchestra.

Philadelphia Orchestra. November 2, 2006 concert at Kimmel Center, Verizon Hall, Broad and Spruce Sts. 215-893-1900 or www.philorch.org.

Lewis Whittington

Articles 1 minute read

Dylan the Romantic

What is Romanticism, really? If you won’t listen to the song cycles of Schubert or Schumann, you can find the answer in the song cycles of Bob Dylan.
Dan Coren

Dan Coren

Articles 6 minute read

Shostakovich in New York

Valery Gergiev wraps up his Shostakovich symphony cycle in New York, and reveals a composer on whom the 20th Century set its seal as on no other.
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Articles 6 minute read
248 E Eschenbach

Orchestra's thin skin

Peter Dobrin, it appears, really does get under the skin of the Orchestra's management after all.
Dan Coren

Dan Coren

Articles 4 minute read
246 Mimi Rod 1868

OCP's 'La Bohème'

OCP has settled into a groove of predictably pleasant productions: If they don’t blow you away, neither do they go up in flames. And what could be more realistic than an opera about sruggling artists performed by struggling artists?

La Bohème. By Giacomo Puccini; directed by Robert Driver. Opera Company of Philadelphia production through Nov. 11, 2006 at Academy of Music, Broad and Locust Sts. (215) 893-3600 or www.operaphi
Dan Rottenberg

Dan Rottenberg

Articles 3 minute read

Eschenbach bows out

Christoph Eschenbach’s departure from the Philadelphia Orchestra, just five years after he arrived, reflects a planning deficiency reminiscent of the war in Iraq. It leaves the Orchestra’s board with the sort of succession headache it hasn’t suffered since 1912. The good news is: That crisis turned out very well indeed.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 4 minute read
236 dylan bob 2

Survival in the digital age

Bob Dylan’s career arc— from records to movies to DVDs to books to the Internet— is a tribute to the power and versatility of modern media. Other modern composers like Luciano Berio— not to mention old stalwarts like Beethoven— weren’t so fortunate. But whose work will survive the next time the electric power grid fails?
Dan Coren

Dan Coren

Articles 9 minute read
232 andrewatts

Philadelphia Orchestra with André Watts

While maestro Eschenbach kept the symphonic gush poised and understated, Watts dispatched the Brahms Second in a manner reminiscent of Olivier playing Hamlet. Poor Pyotr Tchaikovsky wasn’t so lucky.

Brahms Piano Concerto #2, Tchaikovsky Symphony #6 (Pathetique). Philadelphia Orchestra with piano soloist André Watts. Oct. 5-10, 2006 at Verizon Hall. 215-293-1900 or www.philorch.org.

Lewis Whittington

Articles 1 minute read

Sign up for our newsletter

All of the week's new articles, all in one place. Sign up for the free weekly BSR newsletters, and don't miss a conversation.

Rufus Wainwright at Penn

Rock star Rufus Wainwright is the gay man straight women want to sleep with and straight males watch to discover his secret.

Rufus Wainwright with Jill Stevenson. Oct. 6, 2006 at Irvine Auditorium,
University of Pennsylvania Campus (34th and Spruce St.). www.rufuswainwright.com.

Lewis Whittington

Articles 2 minute read
226 wispelwey

Chamber Orchestra's Shostakovich

The much-persecuted Dmitri Shostakovich was served heaping portions of artistic justice for his 100th birthday. As conducted by Ignat Solzhenitsyn and performed by the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, the four works soared with bold statements and rich subtleties, bringing forth every emotional dimension and texture.

Shostakovich Centennial Celebration. Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia. September 25, 2006, at Perelman Theater in the Kimmel Center. (215) 545-5451 or

Lewis Whittington

Articles 2 minute read