Concert halls and symphony orchestras try to lure younger listeners by mutilating the music. There’s a better way.
It’s no secret that January and February are the slowest months for the entertainment industry. Between weather, post-holiday blues and lethargy people have plenty of reasons to stay home.
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Watch and listen to recent highlights, including a Shostakovich festival in Germany, the Cleveland Orchestra’s Strauss and Nina Stemme’s Isolde. By ...
With her emotion-evoking operatic range and soprano heights, Dominican opera singer Zuly Inirio is challenging whose voice is embodied and heard throughout the genre. She first saw an opera — “La ...
It’s no secret that January and February are the slowest months for the entertainment industry. Between weather, post-holiday ...
Gustavo Dudamel launches the fall season with a world premiere by the Hawaiian composer Leilehua Lanzilotti and Charles Ives’s panorama of Americana, the Symphony No. 2. Yunchan Lim joins in for ...
Exclusive to the app, Listening Guide is a groundbreaking new feature that takes users inside a notable work of music as they listen, highlighting details and explaining a work in real time as it ...
Most exciting formation of the decade: the 2003 re-birth of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra under Claudio Abbado, who made it a crack band of players he knows and loves from veteran cellist Natalia ...
Hosted by chamber ensemble North Shore Voices, the monthly live music pop-up event features anything from baroque arias to ...
Conductor Semyon Bychkov will take up the post of Paris Opera music director for an initial four-year term from 2028 ...