Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Watch and listen to symphonies by Mahler, a new opera by Missy Mazzoli, Ray Chen’s take on video game music and more. By Joshua BaroneCorinna da ...
How is the classical music world changing? Looking back on a dizzying year, we pay particular attention to performers’ ...
Here’s a familiar scene of a night at the symphony: a perfectly disciplined audience sitting in complete silence for more than two hours with nothing but music. There’s no food, no chit chat, no movie ...
The warm glow of dozens of candles illuminated the stairway leading to the Granada Theater, as guests dressed in classy attire or more casually clothed filled nearly every seat of the historic venue.
To learn to play a string instrument — like the violin or cello — at a high level takes intense practice, lots of money for instruments and lessons, and ideally, involvement with an orchestra or other ...
What followed is a 55-year love affair with classical music — branching out to discover greats like Brahms, Bruch, Mahler, Chopin, Copland, Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff and Elgar as well as lesser known ...