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From the left, Lori Freedman (Bass Clarinet), Gabriel Dufour-Laperrière (Sound Engineer), Geneviève Liboiron (Violin), Daniel Aniez García (Piano), Steven Kazuo Takasugi (Musical Direction), Sarah Albu (Soprano), Huei Lin (Video Artist), Emilie Girard-Charest (Cello), Noam Bierstone (Percussion, and production leader), Jeff D’Ambrosio (Lighting), and Felix Del Tredici (Bass Trombone) TIME:SPANS 2025

Il Teatro Rosso - 赤い劇場

Kentaro Ogasawara August 26, 2025

Montreal's Red Theater merges poetry, sound, video, and performance into a total artwork. Takasugi and Huei Lin’s score, performed by seven vaudevillians, blends chaotic microtones with vivid visuals, dissolving illusions and evoking infinity. At Time: Spans 2025, the ensemble, led by Noam Bierstone, revealed mastery over time, space, and perception.

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In review Tags contemporary-classical-music
Comment

Severance Hall, Cleveland

THE ROOTS OF FORGIVENESS, Cleveland Orchestra at Severance Hall, Ohio

Kentaro Ogasawara June 19, 2025

The Cleveland Orchestra under Franz Welser-Möst performed Janáček’s Jenufa at Severance Hall (May 25). With Nina Stemme as Kostelnička, the music’s raw motifs and immediacy revealed Janáček’s deep empathy for ordinary lives. Unlike New York, the intimacy of Severance Hall revived the author’s youthful passion for music.

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In review Tags cleveland-orchestra
Comment

Tchaikovsky's Salvation, Queen of Spades at Met Opera

Kentaro Ogasawara June 3, 2025

At the Met’s Queen of Spades, Herman, consumed by gambling, betrays Lisa to learn the Countess’s secret, leading to Lisa’s suicide and his own. Tchaikovsky’s drama blends corrupted aristocracy, aching folk songs, and Herman’s tormented passions. Stunning contrasts of love, riveting choruses, and Sonya Yoncheva’s tragic Lisa made it unforgettable.

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In review Tags opera
Comment

21 Century Salome at The Met

Kentaro Ogasawara May 12, 2025

Claus Guth’s new Salome at the Met reimagines Strauss’ 1905 shocker with seven Salomes, tracing abuse, obsession, and fractured identity. Transparent orchestral colors heighten the perverse, ecstatic drama, while Elsa’s portrayal adds compassion over pure decadence. Childhood, violence, and desire fuse in a haunting 21st-century vision.

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In review Tags opera
Comment

Nelsons and Boston Symphony tell Shostakovich's Nabat

Kentaro Ogasawara May 1, 2025

At Carnegie Hall, the BSO and Andris Nelsons performed an all-Shostakovich program with Yo-Yo Ma in the Cello Concerto No. 1 and the Symphony No. 11. Before playing, Ma said, “We play Shostakovich so that no death is ever just a statistic.” The concerto’s D-S-C-H motif, ironic colors, and Russian soul resonated deeply, honoring the composer’s legacy.

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In review Tags concert, boston-symphony
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Boston Symphony and Nelsons tell Shostakovich's magic spel at Carnegie Hall

Kentaro Ogasawara April 30, 2025

4.23.2025. Andris Nelsons led the BSO with Mitsuko Uchida in Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4, her quiet intensity evoking a sense of struggle, fragility, and resolve. Shostakovich’s final Symphony No. 15 followed—whimsical, grotesque, and haunted by death. The concert felt less about form than shared spirit, Boston’s essence shining through.

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In review Tags concert, boston-symphony, carnegie-hall
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Mitsuko Uchida Carnegie Hall Recital

Kentaro Ogasawara April 14, 2025

Pianist Uchida's recital (Apr 9) paired Beethoven’s Sonata Op.90, Schoenberg’s atonal Op.11, Kurtág’s elegy, and Schubert’s final Sonata D960. With clarity and depth, she traced battles of head and heart, Schoenberg’s freedom, Kurtág’s grief, and Schubert’s fragile late beauty—an intimate journey across centuries of sound.

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In review Tags recital, piano, mitusko-uchida, carnegie-hall
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Joana Mallwitz - Metropolitan Opera debut by true globalist comedy

Kentaro Ogasawara April 11, 2025

At the Met, Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro reveals 18th-century aristocratic life through human drama and elegant polyphony. Under Joana Mallwitz, the orchestra’s dynamics highlight solos and recitatives, while a diverse cast portrays love, jealousy, and forgiveness. The Count’s apology brings a moving coda, blending humor, emotion, and harmony.

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In review Tags Joana-Mallwitz, conductoer, opera
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Chochieva's Carnegie Debut

Kentaro Ogasawara April 7, 2025

Zlata Chochieva’s Carnegie Hall debut (Apr 2) showcased Bach, Schumann, Brahms, Rachmaninoff, and Mendelssohn. Her delicate tone, deep expression, and nuanced control brought out both youthful intensity and mature depth. The recital, capped by Rachmaninoff and Villa-Lobos encores, was a masterful and memorable debut.

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In review Tags piano, Zlata-Chochieva, recital
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Julia Fischer and Jan Lisiecki's Spring battle in New York

Kentaro Ogasawara April 4, 2025

Julia Fischer and Jan Lisiecki performed at the newly renovated David Geffen Hall on April 1st. Their program featured Mozart, Beethoven, and Schumann, highlighting the evolving violin-piano dialogue: Mozart’s piano leads, Beethoven balances both, and Schumann favors the violin. The hall’s intimate acoustics enhanced the purity of Mozart, the expansiveness of Beethoven, and the passion of Schumann, while the performers’ interplay created a thrilling, deeply expressive evening, capped by two encores.

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In review Tags Julia-Fischer, Jan-Lisiecki, recital
Comment

Most and Cleveland Orchestra's 23rd years fate at Carnegie Hall

Kentaro Ogasawara March 31, 2025

Franz Welser-Möst and the Cleveland Orchestra performed at Carnegie Hall on March 19, presenting Stravinsky’s Petrushka and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5. Mösto’s passionate direction revealed every nuance, from Petrushka’s playful mischief to Tchaikovsky’s portrayal of fate. The orchestra’s precision, expressive solos, and vivid storytelling made for an emotionally powerful, masterful evening.

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In review Tags Franz-Welser-Möst, Cleveland-Orchestra, concert
Comment

Franz Welser-Möst and the Cleveland Orchestra - Fighter for freedom at Carnegie Hall

Kentaro Ogasawara March 26, 2025

Möst and the Cleveland Orchestra faced challenges but triumphed in their 23rd New York concert. They opened with Beethoven’s “Fate” Symphony, performed Janáček’s poignant suite from From the House of the Dead, and ended with Beethoven’s Leonore No. 3, celebrating freedom, courage, and human dignity with deep sincerity and passion.

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In review Tags Franz-Welser-Möst, cleveland-orchestra, Carnegie-Hall, Concert
Comment

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