Classical groups are playing with format — shorter concerts, earlier curtain times, pop-up performances, and more.
For a minute, it feels like you've traveled back in time to Victorian England. Or maybe you're on the set of "Bridgerton," instead. Four musicians sit onstage surrounded by flickering candles ...
Up-and-coming musicians, part of a rigorous eight-week intensive program, return to perform in the Miami Beach Classical Music Festival (MMF) with a series of immersive performances, operas, and live ...
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Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Is that a piccolo peeking out from behind the library check-out desk? Could that be a tenor ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Fall Preview Malcolm X at the Met. Jaap van Zweden’s farewell to the New York Philharmonic. Premieres by Kate Soper and Ted Hearne. It’s shaping up to ...
Spring can be the slow time in classical music, that part of the year when the major orchestras and opera companies are winding down — and just before the big, outdoor summer season starts up. But ...
Classical music’s very name seems to imply looking backward, but many of this winter’s concerts performed or presented by Portland-area “classical” music groups squarely address today’s concerns. From ...