Reviews

Lisa Hirsch - October 10, 2011

A wind quintet formed by members of the Berlin Philharmonic plays works by great Czech composers with panache and flair.

Jeff Dunn - October 7, 2011

At the helm of the San Francisco Symphony, with Joshua Bell as soloist, conductor Vasily Petrenko delivers on his program, but only half-way.

Janos Gereben - October 7, 2011

Leta Miller's book Music and Politics does what few histories or musicological studies do: offers a lively and entertaining read dealing with San Francisco's history of classical music.

Jeff Dunn - October 5, 2011

A revered San Francisco institution inhabits the Difficult Music Zone, with works new and really old, but all of them challenging to ear and mind.

Brett Campbell - October 4, 2011

A canny pianist takes listeners on a rewarding journey through Bachtian fields on a CD that is at once playful and arresting.

Lisa Hirsch - October 4, 2011

It’s “Thomas Adès Time” in the Bay Area, as the composer/pianist and the Calder Quartet perform a few of his works, ranging from lyrical and playful to formidably complex.

Jeff Kaliss - October 4, 2011

Bluegrass, banjos, and country-and-western play to happy multitudes in Golden Gate Park.

David Bratman - October 3, 2011

Symphony Silicon Valley launches its season on a bright note, with a Cuban-inspired work by David Amram and an outer-space adventure.

Jason Victor Serinus - September 30, 2011

A little over a year after handsome Vittorio Grigolo turned heads and hearts with his first album, The Italian Tenor, he brings us Arrivederci. It's a demonstration of how the 31-year-old tenor’s god given instrument has naturally darkened on top while retaining its beauty.

Georgia Rowe - September 30, 2011

Each work on the S.F. Symphony program, conducted with tremendous verve by MTT, came across splendidly, with Thomas Adès’ Polaris, radiating light and emerging as the evening’s high point