Paul Dresher and Amy X Neuburg venture at Cal Performances

Scripting the visual – ten composers at Cal Performances A marvelous project, three years in the making, came to fruition at Zellerbach Playhouse last Friday, December 5. Composers Paul Dresher and Amy X Neuburg joined their considerable – and considerably different – forces to create a program in which ten composers joined photographs, text and music. Titled “They Will Have Been So Beautiful: Songs and Images of Now,”...

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Susanna Mälkki conducts Jeremy Denk and the SF Symphony

Denk does Béla – a sensitive reading After days of turkey and pumpkin and fullness and family, Davies Symphony Hall was nearly sold out for a concert of good-natured music. Led by visiting Swedish conductor Susanna Mälkki, the San Francisco Symphony was gloriously responsive in the first half but more pedestrian in the second. ...

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Escher Quartet in Burlingame

From frogs to dead flies—a compelling quartet at Kohl Mansion Burlingame’s Music at Kohl Mansion welcomed the Escher Quartet to its Great Hall last Sunday, Nov. 16. This young foursome, with their magnificent technique and monumental interpretation, is at the height of their powers: last year they won a prestigious Avery Fisher career grant, highlighted Music@Menlo’s summer festival, and championed the four Zemlinsky quartets with two just-released...

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Oakland East Bay Symphony commemorates Veteran’s Day

Two huge works and a gratifying performance Two massive epics rewarded a large and faithful audience on Opening Night of the Oakland East Bay Symphony. Last Friday, Nov. 7, Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5 shared a program with an unusual jazz work at Oakland’s Paramount Theater. Led by conductor Michael Morgan with verve and wit, the symphony thundered in its big moments, was pithy in its textures and performed with agility...

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UC Berkeley Symphony Orchestra in Russian program

Under the leadership of music director David Milnes the UC Berkeley Symphony Orchestra has come a long way from a time when attending its concerts was something done as much out of a sense of civic duty as in the expectation of great music-making. And the evidence was surely on display in performances of Rachmaninoff’s daunting Symphonic Dances over the recent Halloween weekend. The Dances, the composer’s last numbered work, truly comprise a magnum opus,...

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