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Susan Hall

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  • National Chorale Hosts 50th Messiah Sing Front Page

    16 Prominent Conductors Participate

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 17th, 2017

    National Chorale mounted its 50th Messiah sing in at David Geffen Hall. The chorus of thousands, one of the largest in the world, was led by sixteen difference conductors representing such institutions as West Point, St. Patrick's Cathedral, colleges and even high schools. Each conductor introduced the chorus s/he led, many directing us to pay particular attention at the conclusion.

  • Britten's Carols at St. Thomas Church Front Page

    Bridget Kibbey on a Celestial Harp

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 16th, 2017

    St. Thomas Church at 53rd Street and Fifth Avenue in New York City is known for its music. Its organ has recently been replaced, but was not called upon for a beautiful concert featuring Benjamin Britten’s Carols. Accompaniment was provided by a harp. Never has an instrument been displayed so fully in its glory as it was by Bridget Kibbey. The composer wrote for the harp and specifically noted that the interlude should not be played if a piano was used.

  • Marriage of Figaro at the Metropolltan Opera Front Page

    The Help Strikes Back

    By: Paul J. Pelkonen - Dec 16th, 2017

    As Mozart's most popular romantic comedy, Le Nozze di Figaro is more than just the story of a crazy household in Spain getting ready for two of its servants to get hitched. Based on what was (at the time) a controversial play by Pierre de Beaumarchais, Figaro is an opera that makes the listener confront ideas of social justice and shouts of the need for equality between different classes within the microcosm of Aguas Frescas, the Almaviva estate. Looking at the opera in this way, the Met's current revival of the company's 2014 production could not be better timed.

  • Park Avenue Armory Makes Room in India Theatre

    Théâtre du Soleil Harmonizes with Hélène Cixous

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 14th, 2017

    The methods of the Théâtre du Soleil are well-known. Actors, crew and the tech staff are all paid the same salary. When Ariane Mnouchkine decided to work in India, everyone traveled to Pondicherry. Works are developed collaboratively. Park Avenue Armory has provided an evocative, dramatic staging of "A Room in India."

  • American Symphony Orchestra's The Triumph of Art Front Page

    Botstein Delivers Grim but Worthy Music of the Eastern Bloc

    By: Paul J. Pelkonen - Dec 10th, 2017

    On Thursday night, Dr. Botstein directed his ASO forces in a long and compelling program titled The Triumph of Art at Alice Tully Hall. Its purpose: provide much needed exposure to composers whose careers largely took place on the shadow side of the Soviet empire. This concert featured two works by the Polish composer Grayna Bacewicz and important symphonies by Bohuslav Martin and Alfred Schnittke. All are worthy of inclusion by some future artistic director with ambition and taste.

  • Philip Glass is Reflected at Carnegie Hall Front Page

    Glass and Next Generation

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 09th, 2017

    American Composers Orchestra performs at Carnegie Hall each year. Their December 8 concert at Zankel Hall was the first to honor the holder of the Debs Composer’s Chair this season, Philip Glass. Glass was over forty when he was able to give up his day job. He has created a world in which young composers can compose full time much earlier in their careers. We heard two of his protégés and the master himself in an intriguing and moving program.

  • Cross That River at 59E59 Theaters Front Page

    Runaway Slaves Became Successful Cowboys

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 08th, 2017

    If you were a runaway slave in the mid 19th century, where did you go to find a new life? Cowboy seemed a good profession. It was far from the south and the new country opening up was not so sensitive to color. Cross That River at 59E59 Theaters looks at one cowboy's life through song and story.

  • The Mad Ones at 59E59 Theaters Front Page

    A Contemporary Road Story

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 07th, 2017

    The Mad Ones takes its title from Jack Kerouac. It is a kind of prequel to On the Road and also the film Thelma and Louise.   Samantha is a high school senior who is ambivalent about following the path for which she has been prepped by her mother.

  • Describe the Night at Atlantic Theater Front Page

    Rajiv Joseph on Persistence of Truth vs Lies

    By: Susan Hall and Rachel de Aragon - Dec 06th, 2017

    The playwright Rajiv Joseph, a Pulitzer Prize winning finalist and winner of Lortel and Obie Awards, arrives at the Atlantic Theater Company with his new work, Describe the Night. The play is almost three hours long, and whizzes by in jewel-like nuggets of high drama. Giovanna Sardelli, Joseph’s frequent collaborator, directs.

  • Edo de Waart Leads NY Philharmonic Front Page

    Emanuel Ax Piano Soloist

    By: Paul J. Pelkonen - Dec 05th, 2017

    A cancellation by a major international conductor is never an occasion for happiness. However, attendees at Thursday nights concert by the New York Philharmonic may have felt fortunate in that august orchestra's choice of substitute. Stepping in for the indisposed Christopher von Dohnányi, Dutch conductor Edo de Waart proved to be an able and welcome substitute.

  • Conrad Tao Electrifies Walter Reade Theater Front Page

    Coffee and Music Courtesy Lincoln Center

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 04th, 2017

    You may have heard Bach, Beethoven and Rachmaninoff before, but probably not delivered with such passion, panache and pure musical mastery. The fourth composer on Conrad Tao's program for Lincoln Center's Great Performer series was Jason Eckardt, a composer who is jazzy, harmonic-cloud-infested, crossing of the hands and collapse into silence before tones can emerge again. Tao is a listener and leads us to listen in a new way as he performs.

  • Orpheus Chamber Orchestra at Carnegie Hall Front Page

    Turls Mørk Brilliant in Shostakovich

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 03rd, 2017

    In Handel's time, there was no orchestra conductor. The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra is committed to rotating leadership. A member of the orchestra keeps the group together with bow and movement of the instrument itself. Democracy works well. The resulting performance is exuberant and joyful.

  • Die Walküre at Lyric Opera of Chicago Front Page

    Christine Goerke Defines Brunhilde

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 27th, 2017

    Everything about the Lyric Opera of Chicago’s second installment in David Pountney's new Ring cycle feels, sounds and looks right. Yet starting with the singing actors’ performances seems only fair. They are superb, one and all. Surely one element of opera under the control of producers is the uniform quality of singing. The Lyric Opera understands this deeply and delivers.

  • West Side Story at Disney Hall Front Page

    LA Philharmonic Provides Live Score

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 24th, 2017

    The theater world was abuzz with West Side Story in the summer of 1957. It was to open on Broadway in the fall, and sure to be a smash hit. That was the word. It was also going to revolutionize musical theater. It did. Now the LA Philharmonic performs the score live as the film rolls on before the audience.

  • Girls of the Golden West in San Francisco Front Page

    World Premiere by John Adams and Peter Sellars

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 23rd, 2017

    Subject matter when John Adams and Peter Sellars double team always arrests. 'Nixon in China' is particularly memorable as China continues to open. 'The Death of Klinghofer' is important as we allow madmen to be called terrorists. In 'Dr. Atomic', the most mememorable moment is Gerald Finley's singing of the John Donne poem, an exquisite and tortured moment in the life of this complicated physicist who helped launch the new nuclear world in Los Alamos. Now we have 'Girls of the Golden West' in San Francisco. Puccini never imagined anything like this!

  • Dimitri Hvorostovsky Dies in London Front Page

    Superstar Baritone an Opera Icon

    By: Paul J. Pelkonen - Nov 23rd, 2017

    Dimitri Hvorostovsky was at the forefront of a generation of singers that, in the 1990s, invigorated the opera houses of the West when they left the recently collapsed Soviet Union. His U.S. debut came in 1993 in a Lyric Opera of Chicago production of La Traviata. His first role at the Met was as Yeletsky in 1995, a role he would sing eight times that season. He died in London at the age of 55.

  • Hannigan and de Leeuw at Park Avenue Armory Front Page

    Eric Satie's Death of Socrates Performed

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 19th, 2017

    The lights in the corridor outside the Veterans Room in the Park Avenue Armory, dimmed to black and down the hallway proceeded the featured artist, Barbara Hannigan, bearing a candle.

  • Pianist Daniil Trifonov at Carnegie Hall Front Page

    Valery Gergiev Conducts the Marinsky Orchestraa

    By: Paul J. Pelkonen - Nov 18th, 2017

    At Carnegie Hall on Wednesday night, the Mariinsky Orchestra and pianist Daniil Trifonov offered the New York premiere of the artist's first Concerto for Piano and Orchestra. Now 26, Trifonov has made a name for himself as a young and respected virtuoso, the leading example of a new generation of piano-slingers thrilling listeners around the world. This concerto, which received its New York premiere at this concert, is his shot at a whole new kind of legitimacy.

  • National Sawdust 5 Boroughs Music Fest Front Page

    New York's Composers a Riot of Song

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 17th, 2017

    In one fell swoop, Jesse Bloomberg, the artistic director for the 5 Boroughs Music Festival, brings together a sampling of composers who are tucked into the nooks and crannies of our city. Assigning them the subject of the city unleashes their spirited take on New York. Songs ranged from poetic evocation to the tiny drama about a struggling barista which was inspired by Monteverdi.

  • Alyson Cambridge Sings at The Crypt Front Page

    William Bolcom's Song Cycle on Sally Hemings

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 16th, 2017

    Composer William Bolcom and librettist Sanda Seaton have drawn a complex and moving picture of Sally Heings in an 18 song cycle. Soprano Alyson Cambridge is Sally and her performances evokes the slave/mistress of Thomas Jefferson.

  • Nezet-Seguin Conducts Philadelphia Orchestra Front Page

    King of Infinite Space

    By: Paul J. Pelkonen - Nov 12th, 2017

    The Philadelphia Orchestra's relationship with music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin is a model of modern artistic collaboration. The Quebecois conductor has brought a much-needed dose of enthusiasm and artistic integrity to the band on Broad Street, and the orchestra has responded according to its gifts with full, rich performances that remain deeply satisfying.

  • Freight with J. Alphonse Nicholson Front Page

    New Federal and Castillo Theatres Triumphant Team Up

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 11th, 2017

    Howard L. Craft has crafted a superb play in Freight: The Five Incarnations of Abel Green. What was it like to be a young black man in America throughout the 20th century and on into our own? Minstrel, preacher, panther, sub-prime mortgage salesman, Abel Green has tried them all. J. Alphonse Nicholson makes his efforts palpably moving.

  • Dominick Argento at Carnegie Hall Front Page

    New York City Opera Gives Composer a Birthday Bash

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 10th, 2017

    Pulitzer Prize-winning composer, Dominick Argento, celebrated his 90th birthday at Carnegie Hall. New York City Opera in its wonderful new incarnation mounted two of the composer's one act monologues in dramatic productions.

  • King of Stage, a Documentary Front Page

    Woodie King Jr. Speaks in Juney Smith's Film

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 07th, 2017

    The silhouette profile of Woodie King, Jr. which often shows up in the new documentary in which his life spins out., makes him look like Alfred Hitchcock. In King of Stage by filmmaker Juney Smith, we come to see that he is at least as good a picker of stories as the mystery master.

  • Beckett Trilogy at White Light Festival Front Page

    Conor Lovett Compels as Molloy, Malone and The Unnamable

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 06th, 2017

    Judy Hagerty Lovett of Gare St. Lazare Ireland has worked for more than two decades to bring the novels of Samuel Beckett to the stage. They are magnificently delivered by Conor Lovett. The Beckett Trilogy, which includes Molloy, Malone Dies and The Unnamable, has its New York premiere in White Light Festival.

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