Caroline Bembia, harp in a small church, 11.22.2025 βit was my first time attending a harp recital. Unlike the sharp attack of a piano or the vibration of percussion, her sound simply emerged and spread through the space. Unlike Lincoln Centerβs cold precision or the Metβs rich resonance, the natural reverberation of the church walls let me fully appreciate the harpβs unique tone and dynamic range.
Read MoreThe Marlboro Soloists at Weill Recital Hall
11.21.2025 Musicians From Marlboro at Weill Recital Hall. A chamber music group made up of young musicians associated with the Marlboro Music Festival in the United States. The festival, established in 1951, is known as a place where young and experienced musicians come together to study and perform chamber music. Selected members of the group give concerts both in the U.S. and abroad.
Read MoreNicolas Altstaedt and Thomas Dunford at Perelman Theater in Philadelphia
On November 20, 2025, I went to Philadelphia to hear Thomas and Nicolas again. The 600-seat Perelman Theater was acoustically excellent. They began with Marais, and the audience let the lute and cello tones drift naturally. Thomasβs Bach felt bright and singing, while Nicolasβs Gigue in the second half moved me to tears, painting fading landscapes with his baroque bow. Surrounded by modern buildings, I imagined the roofs of an old church. Unlike Carnegie Hall, Philadelphiaβs warmth, welcoming people, and audience engagement created a deep emotional experience, revealing scenery and intimacy that made this visit unforgettable.
Read MoreMexican pianist and musicologist CΓ©sar Reyes
CΓ©sar texted me about his recital, so I went. Since I knew him, this is my 1st time seeing his piano. He is a pianist who introduces South American music in the United States. The venue was a music school hall in West Manhattan, surrounded by friends and neighbors, and the concert started at 7:30 p.m.
Read MoreNicolas Altstaedt Γ Thomas Dunford at Carnegie Hall
The world of Nicolas Altstaedt, Cello and Thomas Dunford, Lute's "viol x cello x lute x Bach x modern."that means all contemporaries, an intimate and stimulating dialogue between the two and the audience. The Bourbon sophistication and Bach. It continues with PΓ€rt and then Marais.
Read MoreIan Jones, Baroque Violin at Juilliard
Ian Jones performed Baroque violin at Juilliardβs Morse Hall. Schopβs 1649 Diminutions use intricate variations; Pandolfi Mealliβs La Melana develops motifs with tempo shifts. Biberβs Sonata No. 5 contrasts silence and richness, while Fontanaβs and Schmelzerβs works blend fantasia, cantabile, and technical mastery, showing early violin artistry across Europe.
Read MoreDr. Strauss's Arabella 1 at Met
Dr. Strauss's Arabella, which premiered in 1933, started its rebirth at the Met Opera on 11.10.2025. I love it the first time. The excitement and thrill of seeing the work I had been looking forward to for the first time are still fresh, even 11 years later. It's fun to see the completed Maestro vs. Met. It's also fun to see the highly anticipated new work. But the best part is being reunited with the best friends. Itβs moving to see Maestro Nicholas Carter (Hamlet and Britten) with his whole body, sending life into Straussβs musicβurging the mighty Met Opera Orchestra, led by the concertmaster, Benjamin Bowman, to sing out and come alive.
Read MoreVΓ©ritable TrΓ©sor, Orchestre National de France
Christian MΔcelaru and the Orchestre National de France at Carnegie Hall on 11.9.2025. The program began with Elsa Barraineβs Symphony No. 2, VoΓ―na (War), composed in 1938, just before the outbreak of World War II. Barraineβs work captivates with its modern French transparency condensed into a stable structure.
Read MoreHendel's last Oratorio by Juilliard415
Handelβs oratorio Jephtha (1751) was performed by Juilliard415, Juilliard Schoolβs period-instrument ensemble, on November 8, 2025, at Alice Tully Hall. This, his final oratorio, featured accompaniments to the arias that were varied and richly textured. The vocal ensemble consisted of five singers, ranging from soprano to bass, and the orchestra was full and vibrant. Even the basso continuo accompanying the recitatives was luxurious.γ
Read MoreKyung Wha, Chung-the rebirth and pride at Carnegie
At 77, Giant Violinist, Chung Kyung Wha once again stood at Carnegie Hall. This marked the culmination of her musical career. After a long career, a quiet flame and prayer resonated in the hearts of the enthusiastic audience gathered in the dry Stern Hall. There was no hesitation in the rise of each note, but the quiet determination and resolve that accompanied each note. It wasn't the fiery passion of her youth, but the power to burn like a quiet flame. The violin spoke of strength and kindness that transcend technique. Each time she drew her bow, the silence seemed to breathe, as if decades had passed. And after the sound faded, a prayer lingered. Kevin Kenner let each note speak as if it were a serene melody. Their breathing overlapped, creating a conversation through sound. Kenner added a soft glow to Chung's single note, and Chung responded to Kenner's silence with a prayerful echoβa dialogue that transcended.
Read MoreSymphonic Accordion, Ksenija Sidorova, Carnegie Debut
Ksenia Sidorova gave her debut recital at Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall on 11.5.2025. Almost the entire program was arranged by Ksenia and friends, overflowing with respect for the works, musicians, and friends. As a result, the pieces were deeply connected, and Sidorova's world transcended time and style, unfolding through the accordion.
The program encompassed a wide range of genres, from American minimalism to Bach and numerous folk pieces, imitating a variety of instruments and voices, including organ, folk instruments, orchestra, and voice. The final piece was Schnittke's polystylism, the opera of satire and humor.
Read MorePhiladelphian accusitc at Anderson Hall
Hoping to hear Ax again, I took the train to Philadelphia on November 1st. At Anderson Hall, sunlight filled the glass lobby, and the warm, airy acoustics made the music feel alive. I swapped to a seat in row 12, giving me a perfect perspective on the orchestra and audience alike.
Yannick congratulated Ax before the performance, and the excitement was palpable. The program included Stillβs works, Beethoven, and Brahmsβs Third Symphony. Stillβs music evoked a dreamlike, fantastical world, while Axβs Beethoven revealed profound emotion. Philadelphiaβs sound, especially the cello and bass, built to moments of brilliant intensity, capturing the orchestraβs lyricism and precision.
Yannick guided the performance with effortless control, translating delicate, chaotic feelings into music that felt immediate and intimate. Experiencing the Philadelphia sound firsthand revealed subtleties and warmth that lingered long after the final note. I returned to New York that evening, grateful for a day of extraordinary music, hall, and artistry.
Read MoreAx and Philadelphia 50th at Carnegie Hall
At Carnegie Hall on October 31, 2025, The Philadelphia Orchestra with Emanuel Ax offered a luminous journey through Still, Beethoven, and Brahmsβa concert where nature, spirit, and human expression intertwined. William Grant Stillβs Wood Notes (1947), inspired by Shelby Steeleβs nature poetry, shimmered with dialogue between instruments like rippling water, blending blues, jazz, and Romantic colors into warmth reminiscent of DvoΕΓ‘k and Sibelius. Beethovenβs Piano Concerto No. 3 followedβAxβs 50th anniversary with the orchestra, and Yannick NΓ©zet-SΓ©guinβs birth yearβbridging generations. Axβs playing, breathing between each phrase, revealed Beethovenβs humanity with timeless tenderness, his cadenza rising to a Largo so intimate it brought tears. The finaleβs laughter between violinist Kim and Yannick felt like Beethoven smiling from within. Axβs encore, Schubertβs Serenade, was a whisper of love returned. After intermission, Brahmsβs Symphony No. 4 unfolded as a spiritual heir to Bachβs Cantata No. 150, its sound rising and vanishing like mist. Yannickβs refined bass lines and luminous phrasing wove Stillβs nature and Beethovenβs soul into Brahmsβs deep serenityβa seamless celebration of Ax, Philadelphia, and the living continuum of music itself.
Read MoreSanttu-Matias Rouvali, Nordic Beethoven, Carnegie Hall Debut
The Philharmoniaβs 80th anniversary concert on 10.29.2025 opened with Gabriela Ortizβs If Oxygen Were Green, a vivid 21st-century exploration of light, water, carbon dioxide, consonance, and dissonance. Beethovenβs Piano Concerto No. 5 followed, with VΓkingur Γlafssonβs playful, defiant piano weaving through the orchestra, while principal cellist Tim Hugh and the basses created tender, whispering tones that blended woodwinds and strings in intimate dialogue. Under Santtu-Matias Rouvali, the orchestra breathed with distinct shapes, colors, and intentions, alternating freedom and discipline like a modern Beethoven. Sibeliusβs Symphony No. 5 unfolded with microtonal patterns, off-beat syncopations, and evolving themes; bass and cello provided a living pulse, while horns, winds, and strings conversed with microscopic detail, merging human emotion and natural sublimity. The Andante mosso recalled Beethovenβs Ninth, the third movement rose like a creature shedding its skin, and the finaleβs deep cello-flute resonance and bass drum strokes created a timeless, awe-filled silence. Over two days, the warmth of cello and double bass, especially in the Sibelius waltz encore, revealed the orchestraβs capacity to transform controlled technique into simple, joyful, Karajan-like radiance.
Read MorePhilharmonia's Libestod at Carnegie Hall
The Philharmonia Orchestra celebrated its 80th anniversary with a three-week US tour, culminating in its final performance at Carnegie Hall. It was a performance that captured the breath and heart trembling of their past. The lustre of the strings, the warm breath of the woodwinds, and the brilliance of the brassβthe gentle light of old recordingsβrepresented the love, death, and salvation of Romeo and Juliet. The loneliness beneath Prokofiev's brightness, particularly the momentary silence in the second movement, seemed to stand still. And then, Kantorow's Wagner/Liszt rendition of Tristan's Death of Love from Isolde, which released this loneliness, projected the light and shadow of the Philharmonia Orchestra's lifelong love and death, forever etched in the hearts of the audience.
Read MoreTΓ΅nu Kaljuste, Conductor. My 1st time in New York, a musician called back to an empty stage after the entire program.
PΓ€rt's pain in silence at dry Zankel
FΓΌr Lennart in memoriam (2006) honors Lennart Meri, evoking light and sea; LβabbΓ© Agathon (2004) portrays monk Agathonβs kind deeds; Stabat Mater (1985/2008) contrasts anguish and prayer through voices and strings; Magnificat (1989) modernizes polyphony with tintinnabuli; Te Deum (1985β2007) embodies sacred stillness by Estonian.
Read MoreSilence is the Power, Arvo PΓ€rt's 90th at Carnegie Hall
At Carnegie Hall on October 23, 2025, Paavo JΓ€rvi led the Estonian Festival Orchestra and Choir in a luminous celebration of Arvo PΓ€rtβs 90th birthdayβa journey through sound, silence, and faith. From the solemn bell of Cantus in Memory of Benjamin Britten to the turbulent energy of Perpetuum Mobile and the haunting redemption of La Sindone, each work revealed PΓ€rtβs struggle for spiritual truth amid oppression. The choirβs unified cry in Adamβs Lament evoked humanityβs exile and hope, while Tabula Rasa, with Midori and Hans Christian Aavik, blazed with life before dissolving into sacred stillness. An encore of Passacaglia glowed with Brahms-like warmth, followed by the serene timelessness of Fratres and the cathartic faith of Credo. The evening ended in the gentle peace of Estonian Lullaby, affirming PΓ€rtβs profound humanityβhis art born not of profession, but of silence and soul.
Read MoreThe Principals of the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra at Carnegie Hall on 10.18.2025
Israeli talks by Haim and Tchikovsky at Carnegie Hall
The third day of the Israel Philharmonic's Carnegie Hall performance. Shani is truly fascinating. First of all, his conducting looks Barenbom. He plays the final, dragging note of Tchaikovsky's 6th Symphony. The double bass is muted and plays the final note. The double bass stops. The orchestra's consciousness continues even after the sound has died down. The score specifies the length of the piece, and it ends with a fermata. He doesn't lower his baton. When Jeff, sitting next to me, applauds first, this memory becomes eternal. Shani is a conductor who unleashes everything in the concert. In one section, Shani did not time the Munich Philharmonic's principal cello, Thomas Ruge, and principal violin, Dumitru Pocitari, to enter simultaneously. Since they both enter at their own pace, the individuality of the cello and violin sections, each carrying the main melody, is highlighted. Shani's conducting brings out the artistry of each performer and unlocks unknown possibilities. Even when they are not synchronized, their individual voices eventually become a dialogue, overflowing with a single, powerful energy.
Read MoreLa Fille du RΓ©giment, the Colors spread like a live fresco on an autumn night in New York.
Donizettiβs La Fille du RΓ©giment, which premiered in 1840, opened at the Met Opera on 10.17.2025. Refined and flexible overture. The strings flowed in a legato unlike Mozart or Belliniβlight, supple, smooth as silk. Under Sagripantiβs brushwork, the Met Orchestraβs colors spread like a live fresco on an autumn night in New York.
Read More2nd day Israeli and Shani at Carnegie Ha
The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra and Lahav Shaniβs second Carnegie Hall concert on October 16, 2025, opened with Bernsteinβs Halil (1981), a haunting memorial to a young flutist killed in war. Principal flutist Guy Eshedβs faint singing and scraping sounds intensified the musicβs atonal and tonal shifts, evoking Hindemith, Berg, and postwar American composers, blending menace, hope, and prayer. A silent tribute followed the final non-vibrato flute note. Ben-Haimβs Symphony No. 1 then burst forth with Wagnerian power in the strings, revealing Mahlerian structure infused with Yemeni prayers, marches, and oriental rhythms. The lyrical second movement recalled Adagietto, while a lively tarantella showcased violist Dmitri Ratushβs dark tone. Tchaikovskyβs Symphony No. 5 closed the evening with a heavy, lingering opening and surging brass power, as Shani led the orchestra through intensifying repeated themes, building to a feverish, triumphant finale.
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