This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts. On Jan. 18, 2001, Giuseppe Sinopoli conducted the Dresden Staatskapelle ...
The opportunity afforded by the CAMA International Series at the Granada—to hear the world’s greatest symphony orchestras in an acoustically magnificent hall without leaving Santa Barbara—gives us all ...
Conductor Bernard Haitink is usually the embodiment of musical seriousness and intensity, but in his Proms with the Dresden Staatskapelle, he was having fun. In both concerts he reacted to the ...
The Strauss specialists played his Till Eulenspiegel with a unique understanding, and rescued Mex Reger’s unfairly neglected Variations on Mozart from obscurity The second of the Dresden Staatskapelle ...
A 25-year partnership between orchestra and conductor, joined by a star pianist and 'third player,' brings performance full circle On Sunday afternoon at the Seoul Arts Center, the Staatskapelle ...
Simply sign up to the Life & Arts myFT Digest -- delivered directly to your inbox. The traditional analysis of Mahler interpretation is that performances fall either into the modernist camp, pointing ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by By Daniel J. Wakin In a story of opera house intrigue with nationalist overtones, the Italian general music director of the Saxon State Opera and its ...
Germany’s Staatskapelle Dresden, celebrating 475 years of establishment as one of the oldest orchestras in the world, is visiting Korea to present six concerts, four of which will be accompanied by ...
Simply sign up to the Life & Arts myFT Digest -- delivered directly to your inbox. Caspar drags a dead body with him to the Wolf’s Glen. As the act begins, he hauls out a knife and hacks off its head.
The German/Austrian approach to classical music remains in many ways the single most rigorous example of a continuous performance tradition in all of western culture. Current performers who were ...
The Dresden Staatskapelle, founded in 1548, is one of the finest orchestras in Europe, renowned for its luminous winds, lush string playing, and precise, well-blended sound. It returns to Chicago for ...
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