SFCV RSS Feed Integration

Please use the following button to register our RSS feed of published articles to your favorite RSS reader:

If you're having trouble using the SubToMe service or if your desired RSS aggregation platform is not listed, you can find our raw RSS XML feed at the following URL: https://www.sfcv.org/rss.xml

From all our editors, thank you for being an SFCV reader!

Latest From the SFCV Feed

David Bratman - February 20, 2010
There wasn’t any doubt which piece on their San Francisco Performances program that the King’s Singers had really come to Herbst Theatre to perform on Wednesday.
Joseph Sargent - February 17, 2010
2010 isn't even two months old, and already it's shaping up to be a banner year for Claudio Monteverdi, thanks to the 400th anniversary of the composer's towering Vespro della Beata Vergine. But if you take your Monteverdi a little less monumental, the California Bach Society's next concert set may be just the ticket.
Michelle Dulak Thomson - February 16, 2010

The Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra hasn't been just a Baroque orchestra for a very long time; Haydn, Mozart, and the early Romantics are bread and butter to its seasons now. Still ... Brahms? From a self-described Baroque orchestra?

Jeff Kaliss - February 16, 2010
On tour with the Kronos Quartet and anticipating a phone interview with SFCV, David Harrington found himself thinking about barbed wire fences.
Janos Gereben - February 16, 2010

Dead Come Alive in Santa Cruz

Rockers all: Steve Reich, Terry Riley,<br/> Phil Lesh and MTT

If the establishment of the Grateful Dead Archive in the Ba

Robert P. Commanday - February 16, 2010
While California and its constituent parts sit in a blue mood, Sonoma County on Friday night was celebrating the future and its hopes. At least, 350 of its movers and shakers were doing that, the donors who had raised much of the $96 million toward building the Green Music Center on the Rohnert Park campus of Sonoma State University.
Jesse Hamlin - February 16, 2010
In late 2006, Misha Dichter was visiting his wife’s family in Rio when he sat down at the piano to practice Brahms’ Ballade in D Minor, Op. 10. A simple chord in the second measure stopped him cold. The renowned pianist couldn’t stretch the fingers on his right hand to make the interval of a major sixth. He panicked.

“I have big hands.

David Bratman - February 15, 2010
Music-lovers in the South Bay had their calendars marked. The Takács Quartet came to San José’s Le Petit Trianon on Saturday, as part of the concert series of the San José Chamber Music Society.
Heuwell Tircuit - February 15, 2010
There was nothing of English pastoralism on Friday’s all-British program by the San Francisco Symphony, under guest conductor Charles Dutoit. The two 20th-century works offered a nearly tactile brilliance all evening long, aided and abetted by the orchestra’s concertmaster, Alexander Barantschik, and, in the closing minutes, by the wordless, offstage women of the S.F.
Jason Victor Serinus - February 15, 2010

To honor the 200th anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), our 16th president, the Spokane Symphony under Music Director Eckart Preu commissioned Michael Daugherty to write a Lincoln-themed work for baritone and orchestra.