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Month: March 2024

FRONT LINES OF MUSIC, AND TCHAIKOVSKY TOO

FRONT LINES OF MUSIC, AND TCHAIKOVSKY TOO

ROHNERT PARK, CA—-A petite figure from New Zealand brought down the house at the Santa Rosa Symphony, playing the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto with an irresistible engaging spirit. Disavowing the powerhouse approach to this concerto, Geneva Lewis set out spinning themes in soft, poetic terms. Her silky play grew in momentum and force through the imposing first movement, ever more climactic, in her congenial collaboration with the orchestra and conductor Francesco Lecce-Chong. In a rare show of enthusiasm prior to the…

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A TIMELESS HEROINE FOR OUR TIMES

A TIMELESS HEROINE FOR OUR TIMES

BERKELEY, CA—-“Anna Karenina” may stem from 19th-century literature, but she is very much a woman of our era, led by her heart, for which she is condemned by a starchy old-line society. Her tale has been taken up by many ballet choreographers since the middle of the past century, none of them more brilliant than Yuri Possokhov, whose mellifluous flow of major-production dancers in his five-year-old “Anna” more than compensates for his insatiable thirst for scenelets—13 of them in all,…

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TURNING THE BRIGHT LIGHTS ONTO SOMBER EASTER WEEK

TURNING THE BRIGHT LIGHTS ONTO SOMBER EASTER WEEK

BERKELEY—I don’t know if it was more revelation or intoxication. But American Bach’s lucid performance of the St. John Passion offered gobs of both. Yes, even Bach can be intoxicating with his lesser-known Passion oratorio—–usually running in 2nd place to the St. Matthew Passion, which for me is the greatest baroque opera of all, even in a sacred-concert version. The St. John came much earlier, dealing with the suffering/death of Christ in a more detached, consolatory and lyrical way. Clearly,…

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HARNESSING MULTIPLE SENSES FOR SYMPHONY: AN ENIGMATIC PAIRING

HARNESSING MULTIPLE SENSES FOR SYMPHONY: AN ENIGMATIC PAIRING

Back in the 20th century, we acquired television. And in the 21st, we have now moved on to smellevision, fulfilling suppressed aspirations of 19th century composer Alexander Scriabin. It was a long time coming. Bathing in choreographed fragrances for the first time in memory, the S.F. Symphony treated its patrons to a multi-sensory extravaganza of Scriabin’s 20-minute “Prometheus: Poem of Fire” music, with brilliant colored lights, and pleasant smells on cue piped into Davies Hall. This was as much a…

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