Music

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Page 97

The secret behind Beethoven’s Ninth

What Beethoven dreamed in his inner ear

From Berlin to Beijing, Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony has become a universal symbol of hope. It’s also recognized as the ideal fusion of music and poetry. How on Earth did a composer who was deaf and dying manage such an awesome achievement?

Clarence Faulcon

Articles 4 minute read
Rogier van der Weyden’s Annuciation, c. 1434

Piffaro's annual Christmas concert

A Renaissance-American Holiday Fete

Piffaro’s annual holiday program once again presents a Renaissance fete that reflects our American mashup of Christian holy day, pagan winter solstice, and end-of-the-year bash.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Articles 3 minute read
When is a theorbo not a theorbo? (“The Theorbo Player,” by Antiveduto Gramatica)

Composer intent

The sound of the music

I accepted a commission to rework one of my pieces because I relished the challenge of changing it, to see if it would still work. Composers love creating problems to solve.
Kile Smith

Kile Smith

Articles 4 minute read
Strepponi was shunned as a whore even after Verdi married her.

Verdi’s twin passions (Part 1)

Verdi’s central character: himself

Verdi’s music stirred patriotic fervor among Italians and also plumbed the emotional price that society exacts from those who love deeply. Both stemmed directly from his own personal experiences.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 6 minute read
Distler (above) lived in Germany in the wrong century.

Bach Festival’s Cantata series

Bach with a dash of Bacchus

The Bach Festival Cantata Series provided another reminder of why Bach’s music cheers us: because no matter what the subject, we can feel his sheer delight in his own creativity.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Articles 3 minute read
Weinberg: Rediscovered after 60 years.

Dolce Suono confronts totalitarianism

Up from tyranny

All the pieces on Dolce Suono’s “Return to Russia” program came with stories that connected them to the history of 20th Century totalitarianism.
Tom Purdom

Tom Purdom

Articles 5 minute read
Maestri: Instead of a mandolin, a radio.

The Met’s ‘Falstaff,’ set in the ’50s

Sir John orders room service

The Met’s new version of Verdi’s Falstaff brings that portly symbol of vice and gluttony from medieval morality plays into the 1950s. Verdi and Shakespeare alike would turn over in their graves.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 4 minute read
Whittington, Adams: Pot explains everything. (Photo: Paul Sirochman)

‘Così fan tutte’ goes back to the '60s

At last, a credible Così

Così fan tutte has confused operagoers for years. With the help of marijuana and hallucinogenics it suddenly became clearer. With that curious and mind-bending help, this concept by Nic Muni made sense. .
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 2 minute read
Holbrook (left), Dubin: The idealized vision survives.

Concert Operetta salutes Eddy and MacDonald

‘America’s Sweethearts,’ off screen

Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald are remembered today as romantic movie stars, but they were flesh-and-blood people, as I can attest.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 3 minute read
Jammin' with Janacek (above) recharged my batteries.

Saved by rock ’n roll

No kidding: How rock expanded my musical horizons

It’s easy for a professional Classical musician like me to get stuck in a rut. Then rock music reminded me why I became a musician in the first place.

Michael Lawrence

Articles 4 minute read