Music

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Page 95
The Beatles on "The Ed Sullivan Show," February 9, 1964: Everybody but Kile was watching.

Three things I learned from the Beatles

The Beatles have many lessons for us, musicians and fans alike.
Kile Smith

Kile Smith

Articles 5 minute read
Beethoven's Kreutzer sonata would have been the Bridgetower sonata, had the composer not quarreled with the violin virtuoso for whom he wrote it.

Chamber music is strong in Philadelphia

Small forces, big effects

The Philadelphia Chamber Music Society and the Philadelphia Chamber Ensemble present two concerts that capture the variety and liveliness of the Philadelphia chamber music scene.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Articles 4 minute read
Pharoah Sanders in December of 2006; photo by Dmitry Scherbie

Pharoah, Freda, and me

Back in his wayward youth, Bob Ingram met a lot of jazz greats — including, on one memorable night, sax great Pharoah Sanders and "Band of Gold" singer Freda Payne.
Bob Ingram

Bob Ingram

Articles 3 minute read
More comfortable, or a man who knows his audience?

Lupu and Yannick at the Kimmel (1st review)

Do clothes make the man?

Yannick Nézet-Séguin has apparently decided to forgo wearing a tie when he conducts. Is that disrespectful or the mark of a someone who’s tremendously connected?
Dan Rottenberg

Dan Rottenberg

Articles 2 minute read
Verdi rarely reached out to others— except in his operas.

Verdi at 200 (Part 2): A private life in public

Scorned by critics, adored by the masses

Between 1849 and 1871 Verdi composed a dozen remarkable operas, many of them drawn from his unconventional personal life. The Italian masses may have been drawn to Verdi’s rejection of bourgeois hypocrisy as much as to his music.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 5 minute read
Renée Fleming sings the national anthem at Super Bowl XLVIII.

Renée Fleming sings the national anthem

Sacred melodies

Not everyone appreciates the liberties taken with "The Star-Spangled Banner" — or any other classic song, like "Danny Boy." What makes some embellishments "too much"?
Maria Thompson Corley

Maria Thompson Corley

Articles 3 minute read
Music fit for a Sun King

Tempesta di Mare presents music from the court of Louis XIV

In the chambers of Versailles

Tempesta di Mare showcases an impressive tenor and eavesdrops on the private artistic world of Louis XIV and his courtiers.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Articles 3 minute read
The Curtis Symphony Orchestra (photo by David DeBalko)

The Curtis Symphony Orchestra at the Kimmel Center

Report from a besieged city

The Curtis Symphony Orchestra is top-notch by any standard, as it proved again in a winter concert featuring Glinka, Bartók, and Shostakovich’s massive Seventh Symphony.
Robert Zaller

Robert Zaller

Articles 5 minute read
You don't have to be Thelonious Monk to improvise at the keyboard.

How I learned to improvise

In music, as in life, there's nothing worse than someone who talks all the time but never says anything.

Michael Lawrence

Articles 2 minute read
What was Muti's college major? Guess again.

What makes a composer great?

What Beethoven knew (and Muti and Charles de Gaulle, too)

Musicologists have long known that certain combinations of notes move our emotions in certain ways. So what, exactly, did Beethoven and Mozart bring to the table that, say, the purveyors of Muzak didn’t?
Dan Rottenberg

Dan Rottenberg

Articles 4 minute read