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Latest Articles
All you need is love
Outpourings of love have been flooding the Boston musical scene.
Marylou Speaker Churchill memorial, Emmanuel Music’s Haydn/Schoenberg, and more
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| April 23, 2010
Stuff at night
This week’s health headlines also included the announcement from the Boston Symphony Orchestra that music director James Levine has been sidelined again, from the “excruciating pain” he’s been suffering since his surgery for a herniated disc.
The BSO without Levine, Yo-Yo Ma, the Cantata Singers, American Classics, the Zarounian Ensemble
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| April 02, 2010
2009: The year in Classical
This was a queasy year for classical music.
Beating the quease
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| December 25, 2009
Wanting more
After its triumphant traversal of the complete Béla Bartók string quartets at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, the Borromeo Quartet was back for a free 20th- and 21st-century program at Jordan Hall, leading off with an accomplished recent piece by t
The Borromeo and Emerson String Quartets, Dohnányi with the BSO, and Yiddish operetta at Harvard
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| December 11, 2009
Mixed media
Film noir has been a running theme in composer/pianist Ran Blake's work since the beginning of his career — his very first album, The Newest Sound Around (RCA, 1962), with singer Jeanne Lee, began with David Raskin's theme to Otto Preminger's Laura .
Ran Blake's Pawnbroker, Sofia Koutsovitis's pan-American roots
By
JON GARELICK
| November 20, 2009
In the swim
My head’s swimming.
Guerilla Opera, von Stade’s farewell, the BSO, Handel and Haydn, the BPO, and that Tosca
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| October 16, 2009
Providence Fall Preview Listings 2009
A page of listings for local music, theater, art, festivals and more this fall.
Music, theater, art, festivals and more in the coming months
By
PHOENIX STAFF
| September 18, 2009
Midsummer madness
After a relatively quiet summer, I saw Boston Midsummer Opera's Cosí fan tutte at BU's Tsai Center. Then I raced out to Tanglewood for a Mark Morris program accompanied by Yo-Yo Ma and Emanuel Ax, a BSO matinee with Ma, and all six concerts in the annua
Mark Morris, Yo-Yo Ma, and the Festival of Contemporary Music at Tanglewood, Mozart in Boston, Meyerbeer at Bard
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| August 21, 2009
Dancing in a new direction
The 100th birthday of Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes prompted the expected centennial tributes in Boston: a "Diaghilev's Ballets Russes 1909–1929: Twenty Years That Changed the World of Art" symposium and exhibition at Harvard University in April, and
Notes from 'Ballets Russes 2009'
By
JEFFREY GANTZ
| May 29, 2009
Here comes the bride
It's been a long time since Bostonians had the chance to see the most popular Czech opera, Bedrich Smetana's The Bartered Bride , but Opera Boston followed its electrifying run of Shostakovich's The Nose with this tuneful folk opera and gave it a swe
Opera Boston's Smetana, the BSO's Berlioz, and Dawn Upshaw
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| May 08, 2009
A little history
Two of Boston's most admired and honored composers (both Pulitzer winners) have just celebrated landmark birthdays: Yehudi Wyner his 80th and John Harbison his 70th.
Yehudi Wyner and John Harbison, Susanna Mälkki with the BSO, Natalia Gutman with the BPO, and BLO's Don Giovanni
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| May 01, 2009
Home cooking
If the name "National Philharmonic of Russia" puts you in mind of some provincial Slavic ensemble making the American rounds, you're not alone.
The National Philharmonic of Russia at Symphony Hall
By
JEFFREY GANTZ
| May 01, 2009
Schnozzola!
By the time you read this, you've either seen or missed one of Boston's most exciting opera productions, Opera Boston's brilliant version of Shostakovich's The Nose .
Opera Boston doesn't blow The Nose — plus Yannick Nézet-Séguin's BSO debut and the return of Lang Lang
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| March 03, 2009
Beloved of God
One of my most profound musical experiences took place when I was still a graduate student.
Levine's Mozart with the BSO, plus Gabriela Montero and Benjamin Zander with the Boston Philharmonic
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| February 26, 2009
Yes you can!
Upcoming opera, chamber, and new-music performances in the Boston area
Stay tuned
By
SARA FAITH ALTERMAN
| January 23, 2009
Lift every voice!
Opera is the big word for 2009.
Classical goodies for 2009
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| December 30, 2008
Elegy of Life. Rostropovich. Visnevskaya
Sokurov makes his position clear: these are true Russian patriots.
A great and lasting love story
By
GERALD PEARY
| August 13, 2008
Prodigies old and new
Tharp’s dances almost invariably have a euphoric effect on their first audiences, even when they miss their mark and don’t hold up over the long run.
Tharp’s Rabbit and Rogue at ABT, Ratmansky and Robbins at NYCB
By
MARCIA B. SIEGEL
| June 10, 2008
Is there a pianist in the house?
Moved and excited by pianist Leon Fleisher in Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto with the Boston Symphony, I wanted to hear it again.
A last-minute Emperor at the BSO, Gatti and Ohlsson, BLO’s Elisir, and Brahms meets Weill with the Cantata Singers
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| March 18, 2008
Russians on the run
Zander balanced the pathos and the passion here the way you have to balance the rose and the distaff/thorn in The Sleeping Beauty , and that was no small thing.
Benjamin Zander and the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra at Sanders Theatre, February 24, 2008
By
JEFFREY GANTZ
| February 26, 2008
Unembarrassed riches
Some weeks Boston has such musical riches, one wouldn’t want to be anywhere else.
Dutoit and Elder at the BSO, Collage’s Berio, Boston Conservatory’s Turn of the Screw, and Kurt Weill at the Gardner and the MFA
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| February 21, 2008
Too much too soon?
Two of the most exciting concerts announced for this winter are on the same date, February 24.
Classical goodies for 2008
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| January 31, 2008
Love and loss
Boston’s biggest classical-music story this year was also its saddest.
Classical: 2007 in review
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| December 18, 2007
Hail and farewell
The season’s most eagerly awaited (and, with its $187 top ticket price, most expensive) classical concert was not a disappointment.
The Berlin Philharmonic’s Mahler, the St. Lawrence String Quartet, and the BSO’s Smetana
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| November 27, 2007
Super abundance
“Something absolutely extraordinary is happening in Venezuela,” announced Tony Woodcock.
Gustavo Dudamel and the Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela; James Levine’s Berg and Mahler; Measha Brueggergosman at Jordan Hall
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| November 13, 2007
The people's choice?
Gustavo Dudamel, in case you hadn’t heard, is the 26-year-old Venezuelan conductor who’s going to save classical music.
Gustavo Dudamel and the Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela
By
JEFFREY GANTZ
| November 08, 2007
Lorca without Lorca
Is it possible for a work of art to seem both completely sincere in its intentions and at the same time counterfeit and manipulative?
Opera Boston’s Ainadamar, plus Ida Haendel, the BSO, and West Side Story
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| October 30, 2007
Keep it moving
The Pilobolus troupe was named after a common barnyard fungus whose spores accelerate from 0-40 mph in the first millimeter of flight.
The ever-evolving Pilobolus
By
JOHNETTE RODRIGUEZ
| September 25, 2007
World music
There’s more to Boston’s classical music scene than the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
The BSO goes traveling, and Berlin comes to Boston
By
LLOYD SCHWARTZ
| September 12, 2007
Grief work
From dance to dance, they shared a movement vocabulary that suggested pain, struggle, solace, and submission to unseen but unbreakable constraints.
Prometheus's 'Devil's Wedding'
By
MARCIA B. SIEGEL
| May 29, 2007
Friends' Activity
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Seeing green
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Erotic Potluck
Valentine's Day for the Frugal and Savvy Diner
Avoiding the V-Day fine-dining shit-show
Van Halen | A Different Kind of Truth
Interscope
Love Hurts: Emo Valentine's Day Cards
Ease the pain of heartbreak with these clip-and-save Valentines
Review: 69°S.: The Shackleton Project
An ethereal trip to the turn-of-the-century wilds of the South Pole
The Big Hurt: The miracle of Japanese Wikipedia
The miracle of Japanese
Dominique Eade at Scullers
All about transparency
Mitt's Charlie Card
It's no surprise that Barack Obama would copy from Deval Patrick's re-election playbook. But why is Mitt Romney making Charlie Baker's mistakes?
Crossword: ''I Oh You One''
Or four, actually
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