Review - QUAD 33/303
Reinvented almost 60 years since the introduction of the original, this preamp/power amp combination...
Successful during Respighi’s lifetime in both Europe and the United States, La campana sommersa was first performed in Hamburg in...
Reviewed by Tim Ashley in issue: 09/2018
Le Temple de la Gloire is an opéra-ballet to a libretto by Voltaire, first performed at Versailles on November 27,...
Reviewed by Richard Lawrence in issue: 09/2018
Claus Guth’s staging of La clemenza di Tito takes place entirely within a split-level set: the private scenes of emotional...
Reviewed by David Vickers in issue: 09/2018
Operetta composers confronted the jazz age in different ways. Prince Sándor in Kálmán’s Die Herzogin von Chicago actually outlaws the...
Reviewed by Richard Bratby in issue: 09/2018
Fromental Halévy (1799-1862): not a name one comes across very often. But he was a key figure, with Meyerbeer, in...
Reviewed by Richard Lawrence in issue: 09/2018
It’s a strange libretto, like a mixture of Lessing and early French light opera. Its political correctness – in ‘the...
Reviewed by Mike Ashman in issue: 09/2018
Mason Bates’s The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs was premiered in Santa Fe last year. Setting a libretto by Mark Campbell,...
Reviewed by Tim Ashley in issue: 09/2018
For their Naxos debut, Jeffrey Douma and the Yale Choral Artists perform music by three Yale composers that projects seriousness...
Reviewed by Laurence Vittes in issue: 09/2018
I decided to review Moonkyung Lee’s mixed programme blind, listening and responding without knowing the composers’ identities beforehand. The opening...
Reviewed by Jed Distler in issue: 09/2018
The Crossing, a chamber choir based in Philadelphia, goes where other such ensembles might fear to tread. Led by Donald...
Reviewed by Donald Rosenberg in issue: 09/2018
Reinvented almost 60 years since the introduction of the original, this preamp/power amp combination...
Richard Whitehouse on an inviting anniversary collection devoted to Charles Ives
‘What emerges is a sense of a musician of true grit and principle, one who fought for what she...
Andrew Farach-Colton on the Channel Classics recordings of Pieter Wispelwey
Rob Cowan immerses himself in collections devoted to three composers and a quartet
David Gutman welcomes two collections released to celebrate the conductor’s career
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