Music

1938 results
Page 69
Vladimir Jurowski: lean and leonine and intensely focused. (Photo by Alexander Nikiforov)

Vladimir Jurowski conducts the Philadelphia Orchestra

The one who got away

Guest conductor Vladimir Jurowski led the orchestra in a varied and challenging program that drew from it some of its best playing in years.
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Articles 4 minute read
Alexander Pushkin was the subject of a recent Fine Art Music Company program. (Portrait by Orest Kiprensky)

Philadelphia Chamber Ensemble and Fine Art Music Company

Small but necessary

Philadelphia’s local music groups may be small, but they all have special strengths.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Articles 3 minute read
Inman (Ott) sings of his journey back to Ada (Leonard, in background). (Photo courtesy Opera Philadelphia)

The East Coast premiere of Jennifer Higdon’s 'Cold Mountain' (1st review)

An intimate musical story

A second look at Cold Mountain reveals intimate aspects. In other words, the mountain thaws out when you approach it from a different perspective.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 3 minute read
The kiss of death. Literally.

'L’amore de tre re' by the Academy of Vocal Arts

The AVA exhumes a buried treasure

There are reasons why L’amore de tre re was neglected for half a century, but its merits override those reasons. The AVA production performed a needed service.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 3 minute read
Like Jefferson Airplane, named for a philosopher: the Emerson Quartet. (Photo by Lisa Mazzucco)

PCMS presents the Emerson Quartet

After 40 years, still on top of their game

The Emerson Quartet, still one of the world’s best, plays now with maturity as well as drive. Its annual Philadelphia performance gave us works of two Romantic masters taken all too young, as well as a modern one who experienced the horrors of his age.
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Articles 4 minute read
Lutenist and composer Mark Rimple, who teaches at West Chester University.

Bach@7 presents new works by Rimple and Edwards

Bach@7 goes Lutheran

Bach@7 tries a new venue and puts on an intercontinental show.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Articles 3 minute read
Schloss Velden in Wörthersee, Austria, the town where Brahms composed his Second Symphony. (Photo by Johnann Jaritz via Creative Commons/Wikipedia)

The Philadelphia Orchestra’s final Vienna concert (second review)

Romance with a touch of class

This Philadelphia Orchestra concert succeeded so admirably because all the musicians were on the same page. They embodied a fundamental idea that romance and boundaries, emotion and structure, are reconcilable opposites that, under the right circumstances, attract. The composers put this idea down on paper, and the musicians executed it in real time.
Victor L. Schermer

Victor L. Schermer

Articles 5 minute read
Andsnes: With a little help from a long human chain. (Photo: ÖzgürAlbayrak.)

The Philadelphia Orchestra’s final Vienna concert

A few words about human chemistry

How exactly does good chemistry manifest itself in an orchestra? The Philadelphia Orchestra’s final Music of Vienna concert got me thinking about the answers.
Dan Rottenberg

Dan Rottenberg

Articles 5 minute read
Two women and a ghost: Chmelensky, Broom, Rozzen. (Both photos by Karli Cadel)

A world premiere of 'Empty the House'

Secrets and regrets

Empty the House, a world-premiere opera composed by a Curtis Institute student, reveals the intimate secrets of a family.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 2 minute read
Austria during Haydn's time, by Canaletto.

Orchestra's Vienna Festival: Haydn and Bruckner

New takes on old favorites

Despite a tendency to equate loud with exciting, Nézet-Séguin captivated a small but feisty audience with interpretations of Haydn and Bruckner that were sonorous, nuanced, and fervent.
Linda Holt

Linda Holt

Articles 3 minute read