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

Janos Gereben - December 4, 2012
Andrew Vi-Luan Ly
Andrew Vi-Luan Ly

Berkeley Symphony's Under Construction Composers Program, enabling Bay Area emerging composers to work with a pro

Janos Gereben - December 4, 2012

National Endowment for the Arts Chairman Rocco Landesman (who is stepping down at the end of the calendar year) has announced that the Association of California Symphony Orchestras is recommended for a $30,000 grant to support professional and leadership development and technical assistance programs for California orchestras.

Among ACSO members receiving NEA grants:

Janos Gereben - December 4, 2012

Mike Boehm, of The Los Angeles Times, reports that Gustavo Dudamel — the Philharmonic's music director, Musician of the Year for 2013 according to Musical America, and visitor to Berkeley last week — received just under $1 million in salary and benefits for 2010, his first full year on the job.

Janos Gereben - December 4, 2012

West Edge Opera is looking for a part-time executive director "to help build a program of exciting opera and service to the community. You will have opportunities to play an important role in fundraising and to help us strengthen all staff positions as the company grows." Good luck!

Janos Gereben - December 4, 2012
Teacher and student at the conference: Abreu and Dudamel Photos by Peg Skorpinski
Teacher and student at the conference: Abreu and Dudamel
Jeff Kaliss - December 4, 2012

Composers/conductors/teachers Dylan Mattingly and Matthew Cmiel riff on working with friends, despite being on opposite coasts.

David Bratman - December 3, 2012

The adventurous nine-member choral ensemble Cantus, along with Theatre Latté Da, will perform works from its recording All Is Calm, a selection of songs, poetry, letters, and journal excerpts relating to the extraordinary World War I “Christmas Truce.”

David Bratman - December 3, 2012

If there’s a Great American Symphony, it’s Roy Harris’ rugged Third from 1938, a fitting companion for “Decoration Day” from Charles Ives’ Holiday's Symphony also on the program from an intrepid amateur community ensemble, the Palo Alto Philharmonic.

Scott Cmiel - December 3, 2012

The Japanese guitarist Shin-Ichi Fukuda possesses an astonishingly large repertoire, ranging from the Renaissance to the present day.