Music

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Page 65
The Aizuri Quartet. (Photo courtesy of the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society)

The Philadelphia Chamber Music Society with the Aizuri Quartet and Ignat Solzhenitsyn

Two quintets with Haydn in the middle

The Philadelphia Chamber Music Society's season ended with both the rare and the familiar, including visits from the Aizuri Quartet and Ignat Solzhenitsyn.
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Articles 3 minute read
Members of Dolce Suono Ensemble, ready for their voyage. (Photo courtesy of Dolce Suono Ensemble)

Dolce Suono Ensemble's 'The Americas Project' at Curtis Institute of Music

A musical journey through the Americas

The Dolce Suono Ensemble's 'The Americas Project' takes a musical trip through North, Central and South America, jet setting around the material with panache.
Victor L. Schermer

Victor L. Schermer

Articles 4 minute read
The harmony of the spheres. (Photo courtesy or Piffaro)

Piffaro's Harmony of the Spheres: Music of the heavenly bodies by Renaissance composers

Harmonizing with the planets

Piffaro demonstrates that an outmoded theory can still produce magical art.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Articles 4 minute read
Adele aus der Ohe. (Photo courtesy of the Muller Collection in The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts)

An update on Tchaikovsky's 1891 visit to Philadelphia

It was 125 years ago today

David M. Perkins revisits Tchaikovsky, 125 years to the day that he first arrived in Philadelphia.
David M. Perkins

David M. Perkins

Articles 5 minute read
Alas, poor Yorick. (Photo by Joe del Tufo, Moonloop Photography)

OperaDelaware's rediscovered 'Hamlet' ('Amleto')

A long-lost Hamlet (Amleto) debuts in Delaware

Arrigo Boito was the musician and playwright famed for turning Shakespeare plays into operas, such as Otello and Falstaff, where he collaborated with Verdi. Now another of his Shakespeare adaptations has been rediscovered after being lost for a century and a half.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 4 minute read
Violin soloist Lana Trotovsek. (Photo courtesy of the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia)

Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia ends its 2015-2016 season

Three stunning premieres, two classics, one fine soloist

Three premieres by living composers, Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto with soloist Lana Trotovsek, and Mozart’s Haffner Symphony conclude the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia's season. Modern works were enthusiastically received, and Trotovsek brought out the beauty in the familiar Mendelssohn concerto.
Linda Holt

Linda Holt

Articles 4 minute read
Pianist Lang Lang. (Photo courtesy of the Philadelphia Orchestra)

Yannick Nézet-Séguin concludes the Philadelphia Orchestra's 2015-16 season

The Philadelphia Orchestra's season concludes with a first and a last

Yannick Nézet-Séguin ended the Orchestra’s subscription concert season with performances of Rachmaninoff and Mahler. Now, what about his tenure as Music Director?
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Articles 4 minute read
Jonathan Wintringham and the East End Quartet rehearse with pianist Pi-Lin Ni. (Photo courtesy of Astral Artists)

Astral Artists and Bach at Seven get saxy

A saxfest and a rock apocalypse

Astral Artists and Bach at Seven explore the possibilities of the saxophone and the value of adding rock elements to a religious choral work.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Articles 3 minute read

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An outstanding evening from violinist James Ehnes and conductor Stéphane Denève. (Photo by Jessica Griffin/Philadelphia Orchestra)

Philadelphia Orchestra continues its celebration of John Williams

John Williams, Beethoven, and Ravel, all in good company

'Star Wars' composer John Williams offers a blend of romantic feeling and contemporary verve in his Violin Concerto. The program opened with Ravel’s airy 'Pavane for a Dead Princess,' and continued with Beethoven's Symphony No. 7.
Linda Holt

Linda Holt

Articles 4 minute read
Doctor Dulcamara (Kevin Burdette) peddles his elixir to Nemorino (Dimitri Pittas). (Photo: Kelly & Massa)

Opera Philadelphia's 'The Elixir of Love' ('L'Elisir d'Amore')

Funny and beautifully sung, but where's Donizetti?

Opera Philadelphia's production of 'The Elixir of Love' is funny and beautifully sung. What more do you want? Well, how about fidelity to the composer’s intentions?
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 2 minute read