Around the U.S.

Summer Festivals: Opera Everywhere, Early Handel to World Premiere

By Heidi Waleson
Something for every taste, for everyone, all over, from Handel's first opera to a new Terence Blanchard opera "Champion" and other hot-off-the-presses new works - nicely enough timed to permit hopscotching around to hear them all!

Summer Festivals: Chamber Music, Orchestral Fare Fill N.E. Ohio

By Daniel Hathaway
Cleveland's Baroque Orchestra, Apollo's Fire, turns into a hot weather folk band as Blossom Festival marks the 100th anniversary of "The Rite of Spring" with the Cleveland Orchestra and Joffrey Ballet. Here's more from northeast Ohio's summertime classical bounty.

Summer Festivals: Scenic Northwest Also a Wonderland Of Classical Music

By James Bash
The Pacific Northwest is well known as a scenic wonderland that attracts summer tourists, and it harbors a wealth of music festivals that complement the dramatic landscape. Here are several of the best in Oregon, Idaho and Washington:

Summer Festivals: Historic Ravinia Remixes Vivaldi, Honors Goodman

By Nancy Malitz
Billed as the oldest outdoor music festival in North America, the Ravinia Festival since 1936 has been summer home to the Chicago Symphony. Music director James Conlon brings Aida and visits by Vengerov, Lang Lang. But jazz and pop figure in.

Summer Festivals: Chamber Music Riches, New Opera Top Spoleto USA

By John W. Lambert
The American sister of Gian-Carlo Menotti’s Italian festival fills the beautiful and historic South Carolina city that rests just west of Fort Sumter (where the first shots of the Civil War were fired).

Anderszewski Enthralls at Duke – Again!

By John W. Lambert
The return of Polish-Hungarian pianist Piotr Anderszewski turned out to be one of the happiest musical occasions of the season, thus far. Music by Bach and Schumann were here enriched by a great rarity, part of Janáček's magnificent set of character-pieces known as On an Overgrown Path.

Gardiner’s Beethoven Ninth Reaches Celestial Heights at UNC’s Memorial Hall

By Geoffrey Simon
Having collectively held its breath throughout each of the Ninth Symphony's four movements, the audience at the University of North Carolina's sold-out Memorial Hall was on its feet with applause and cheers.

Gergiev’s Gripping Shostakovich with Mariinsky Orchestra in Chapel Hill

By Roy C. Dicks
Carolina Performing Arts presented the Mariinsky Orchestra, conducted by Valery Gergiev, in the second of two back-to-back concerts. The orchestra and the conductor again upheld their well-deserved stature in an all-Russian program.

Outdoor Simulcast of Paris Opéra Ballet Proves Harris Theater, Pritzker Dynamic Duo

By Nancy Malitz
Giselle, performed by the Paris Opéra Ballet and the Grant Park Orchestra in Harris Theater, simulcast at Pritzker Pavilion, points to a multi-media future for Millennium Park.

Cincinnati Music Director-Designate Langrée Shows Charm in NY Concert

By Janelle Gelfand
Louis Langrée’s Mostly Mozart programs at the Lincoln Center might have been called Mostly not Mozart this season. But evidenced by the large, young audience that gravitated to Avery Fisher Hall last weekend, Langrée’s programming concept has been a success.

An Appreciation: Brevard Music Center’s Bruce Murray

By Laura McDowell
To those who attend performances at the Brevard Music Center, he’s the guy in the white shirt fraternizing on the lawn of Whittington Pfohl Auditorium at intermission.

Total Immersion as UNCG Focuses on Fauré

By John W. Lambert
UNCG’s Focus on Piano Literature has, since 1990, drawn pianists, piano teachers, and piano music enthusiasts to Greensboro for in-depth study. This year’s edition focused on the music of Gabriel Fauré.

MCANA Reports: San Francisco Opera’s Ring Cycle

By MCANA Critics
Comprehensive coverage of the 2011 production includes Jeff Dunn on Leitmotifs, John W. Barker on Cosima Wagner and reviews by Susan Brodie, Robert Markow and Jens R. Laurson.
New Mexico Symphony Orchestra logo in 2011

Musical Passage, A Poem

By Paul Hertelendy
A tribute to the late New Mexico Symphony Orchestra.

Early but Lively in Madison, Wisconsin

By John W. Barker
”Early music” – generally, music composed up to 1750 – is certainly a familiar commodity in south-central Wisconsin, thanks in part to the Madison Early Music Festival, which runs the second week of every July.
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