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Pitchfork's must-see bands

Pitchfork's must-see bands

Greg Kot breaks down each day at this weekend's Pitchfork Music Festival and tells you which bands you absolutely can't miss (B = Blue Stage; G = Green Stage; R = Red Stage).

John von Rhein

John von Rhein

Classical music critic

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Lisztomania: Bicentenary calls for celebration but also shucking of prejudices

July 12, 2011

Will the real Franz Liszt please stand up?

  • At Ravinia, Voigt falls short of past vocal glories

    July 10, 2011

    One of the inalienable rights of being an operatic diva is being able to call your musical shots just about anywhere. Take Deborah Voigt, for example.

  • It's 'Liszt Vegas' as superstar Lang Lang wows Ravinia crowd at CSO summer opener

    July 9, 2011

    It seemed only fitting that Ravinia's summer-long celebration of the bicentennial of the birth of the 19th century's most eminent showman of the piano, Franz Liszt, should get its orchestral baptism by today's most eminent showman of the piano, Lang Lang.

  • Glass ceiling not a barrier to rising young conductor Alondra de la Parra

    July 5, 2011

    With so many gifted women conductors of almost every nationality shattering the glass ceiling in recent decades, it's no longer a novelty for female musicians to hold major leadership positions with symphony orchestras, opera companies and schools of music, here and around the world.

  • Bell fiddles up a storm at Ravinia; Mahler soars at Grant Park

    July 3, 2011

    By happy coincidence, Chicago's two major summer classical music festivals were celebrating 100th anniversaries over the weekend. For the Grant Park Music Festival, it was the 100th anniversary of Gustav Mahler's death. For Ravinia, it was the centenary of the founding of Indiana University's Jacobs School of Music, which sent its Summer Festival Orchestra and one of its star alumni, violinist Joshua Bell, to Highland Park.

  • Wagner's mighty 'Ring' comes full cycle in San Francisco

    June 28, 2011

    SAN FRANCISCO – The everlasting work is done, to quote Wotan, the power-hungry king of the gods, in Richard Wagner's "Der Ring des Nibelungen" ("The Ring of the Nibelung").

  • St. Louis brilliantly reaffirms 'Klinghoffer' as a landmark American opera

    June 21, 2011

    ST. LOUIS – Year after year, the Opera Theatre of St. Louis attracts opera fans from all over North America to its spring festival seasons at the Loretto-Hilton Center here, and for good reason. Connoisseurs as well as lay listeners are lured by a combination of new and unusual repertory, including 22 world premieres and 22 American premieres to date, along with more standard fare. Everything is sung in English, upholding a tradition almost every other major U.S. company has abandoned.

  • Kalmar, orchestra knock Grant Park festival opener out of the park, despite downpour

    June 16, 2011

    Perhaps they should have played Handel's "Water Music" instead.

  • Grab your guitar and join in for Tuesday's citywide Make Music Chicago fest

    June 15, 2011

    The original plan was simply to throw a musical block party. But the idea quickly grew into something much bigger and far more ambitious – a daylong, anything-goes Chicago festival featuring live music of every variety, presented in public spaces and neighborhoods throughout the city.

  • With Kalmar at helm, Grant Park looks to another summer of good music in a grand setting

    June 14, 2011

    When Carlos Kalmar gives the downbeat for the opening concert of the 77th Grant Park Music Festival on Wednesday night at the Jay Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park, a great deal more will be celebrated than merely the start of his first season in his new dual capacity as principal conductor and artistic director.

  • Chorus musters honorable effort on behalf of Bach's towering B minor Mass

    June 13, 2011

    The North Shore Choral Society enjoys the distinction of being the oldest choral organization on Chicago's North Shore. Its longevity is exceeded only by that of the Apollo Chorus of Chicago, the oldest musical organization in the city, which was founded in 1872, 64 years before its rival community chorus came into being. Each has its own honorable part to play in the cultural life of the metropolitan area.

  • Jascha Heifetz's vast recorded legacy lives on in hefty Sony omnibus

    June 8, 2011

    To Itzhak Perlman, he was, simply, "God." The greatest violin virtuoso of the 20th century. The violinist who almost singlehandedly defined the art of violin performance for an entire era.

  • ICE is hot in season finale of MCA Stage series

    June 5, 2011

    The Museum of Contemporary Art and its director of performance programs, Peter Taub, deserve immense credit for entering into an ambitious and far-reaching collaboration with the International Contemporary Ensemble – ICE, for short. As the MCA Stage's first ensemble-in-residence, ICE is bringing young composers and performers together in ways that make audiences feel invested in the creative process.

  • Haitink's Mahler 9th makes superb season finale for CSO

    June 3, 2011

    What Bernard Haitink has achieved in his music-making over the decades may be seen as a process of greater simplification, of distilling music to its purest essentials and projecting it with the utmost clarity, discipline and understanding. Less is always more with this master conductor, who, at 82, wears his elder statesman status with a grace and modesty batonsmiths many years his junior could learn from.

  • Civic Orchestra, Chicago Youth Symphony have the 'Rite' stuff (and then some)

    June 1, 2011

    The young instrumental talent that is coming out of local music schools and conservatories is as amazingly good as you are going to find anywhere. Much of that talent is on display in the many youth orchestras that dot the metropolitan area – think of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, the Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestras, the Midwest Young Artists ensembles, the Classical Symphony Orchestra and its Protégé Philharmonic, the Elgin and DuPage County youth orchestras, among others.

  • Haitink's mellow mastery an ideal match for CSO's power

    May 27, 2011

    Slinging labels around is always dangerous, but it seems to me that in certain respects Riccardo Muti and Bernard Haitink are the yin and yang of today's leading symphonic conductors.

  • A baton is passed and a legacy is celebrated

    May 24, 2011

    The Chicago Sinfonietta threw a grand retirement party for Paul Freeman, its outgoing founder and music director, as its season finale Monday night at Symphony Center.

  • Strong cash reserves, vigorous fundraising, keep wolf from Lyric Opera's door

    May 23, 2011

    With big U.S. opera companies like the New York City Opera in financial extremis, and others cutting back their seasons as a result of recession-related shortfalls in contributions and ticket sales, Lyric Opera of Chicago continues to sing a happy tune.

  • Lewis' Schubert recital a thing of rare beauty

    May 23, 2011

    Paul Lewis' ongoing cycle of late Schubert piano works here is notable not only for its remarkably thoughtful and beautifully finished pianism but also for its correcting the perception of Schubert as a composer of cheerful, cozy, Biedermeier salon works. Once the Austrian composer was diagnosed with syphilis, in 1822, the expressive nature and message of his music changed. Sorrow and melancholy became more evident, even in works wearing a sunny exterior.

  • Martin's trumpet brilliance steals show at CSO

    May 20, 2011

    The Chicago Symphony Orchestra doesn't play enough French music, so it's usually left to French guest conductors to try to rectify the imbalance. The latest to do so is Ludovic Morlot, the gifted young music director-designate of the Seattle Symphony and a semi-regular at the CSO since his Orchestra Hall debut in 2006. The bookends to his all-Gallic program Thursday night provided the most interesting music, although there was no doubt who stole the show.

  • Broadway's Mary Poppins to board Lyric's 'Show Boat'

    May 18, 2011

    Lyric Opera has announced additional castings for its new production of "Show Boat" next season.

  • Paul Freeman bids farewell to the orchestra he made the most diverse in the nation

    May 18, 2011

    The same week that a historic changing of the guard took place in the Chicago mayor's office, the Chicago Sinfonietta is preparing to say goodbye to its longtime chief executive and to welcome his successor.

  • Philharmonic season ends with music director Rachleff in firm command

    May 16, 2011

    The Chicago Philharmonic has battled its way back from a crippling deficit and cash-flow problems that threatened its existence a couple of seasons ago. The orchestra remains in fine corporate fettle, artistically speaking, as proved by the strength and confidence of its playing at its 21st season finale Sunday evening in Northwestern University's Pick-Staiger Concert Hall, Evanston.

  • Muti, Ma close youth festival with flair

    May 15, 2011

    From all parts of the Chicago metropolitan area they poured into Symphony Center on a rainy Sunday afternoon. They did so to honor an idea and to celebrate a festival dedicated to turning that idea into community-enriching reality.

  • Muti's 'arrivederci' for the CSO subscription season has audience clamoring for more

    May 13, 2011

    Hard to believe, but Riccardo Muti's inaugural season as music director will conclude this weekend. The next time Chicago Symphony Orchestra subscribers will hear him will be in late September, unless they hop a flight to Europe to catch his late-summer festival tour with the CSO. So if you are holding tickets to the last subscription program of his May residency, which will have a final performance on Saturday night at Symphony Center, consider yourselves lucky.

  • No 'hallelujahs' this Christmas unless 'Messiah' funding is found

    May 11, 2011

    For nearly 35 years, the free "Do-It-Yourself Messiah" concerts presented by the International Music Foundation have been as familiar a Chicago holiday tradition as the lighting of the huge Christmas tree at the former Marshall Field's (now Macy's) downtown department store.

  • Double bill scores one hit, one miss for COT in season closer

    May 8, 2011

    Brian Dickie, Chicago Opera Theater's canny general director, is accustomed to making do with relatively little. When budget limitations forced him to postpone COT's scheduled production of Shostakovich's "Moscow, Cheryomushki," until April 2012, he came up with a way to take local opera in yet another intriguing new direction, on a penny-pinching budget.

  • With tenor Bostridge, rare Baroque arias sound newly minted

    May 8, 2011

    Some recitalists present themselves as glittering bodies to be admired by their legions of fans. Ian Bostridge presents himself as a historical explorer. In his fascinating and far-reaching concert with the Canadian period instruments ensemble Les Violons du Roy, Friday night at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, the brilliant British tenor took his audience back to Europe in the early 18th century, when tenors began to supersede castratos as the superstars of opera.

  • Muti's return to CSO leaves hall abuzz with the excitement of old music and new

    May 6, 2011

    Symphony Center promises to be a veritable beehive of music these next few weeks, and that can only mean one thing: Riccardo Muti is back with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

  • Hear Renee Fleming sing for free, and no jacket needed (unless it's chilly)

    May 4, 2011

    Chicagoans won't be hearing soprano Renee Fleming in any staged opera at Lyric Opera of Chicago next season, but they will be able to catch her as headliner of the company's free, preseason concert at Millennium Park.

  • CCM sets adventuresome course for its silver anniversary season

    May 4, 2011

    It's tough being a pace-setting performing arts group, not least because you've got to keep dreaming up innovative things that help you stay ahead of the pack.

  • Chapel acoustics clash with chorale's tribute

    May 2, 2011

    The retrospective concert of choral music and songs by the American composer Dominick Argento presented by the William Ferris Chorale on Saturday night at Loyola University Chicago's Madonna della Strada Chapel brought back memories. The chorus used to salute important American composers on a regular basis during the tenure of its founder and director, the late Chicago composer and conductor William Ferris, who would bring them to town as honored guests.

  • Hubbard Street adds playful zest to CSO program

    April 28, 2011

    The Chicago Symphony Orchestra's annual collaborations with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago have not always displayed either the musicians or the dancers to optimum advantage. But their joint program Wednesday night at Symphony Center, presented as part of the "Afterwork Masterworks" series, proved a happy exception.

  • Will new general director Anthony Freud bring bold artistic vision to Lyric Opera?

    April 27, 2011

    Lyric Opera's announcement last week of Anthony Freud's appointment as its next general director raises questions as to which directions the art form will be heading at one of the world's important opera houses in the remaining years of the decade.

  • French Baroque treasure rescued in stormy 'Medea'

    April 24, 2011

    For opera companies, French Baroque opera is the final frontier. The rescue of this largely unknown repertory from obscurity owes much to the period instruments movement and its proliferation on recordings over the last 40 years or so. The long-neglected stage works of Jean-Philippe Rameau and Marc-Antoine Charpentier have been the chief beneficiaries in live performance and discs, many of the latter owing to the staunch advocacy of the French-based American conductor William Christie.

  • Conlon serves Shostakovich suite to the max with CSO

    April 22, 2011

    The coincidence was striking. Only four days after the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Riccardo Muti had performed Shostakovich's Fifth Symphony in New York, it was back home at Symphony Center to present conductor James Conlon's own orchestral suite drawn from the Shostakovich opera "Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk."

  • Chicago Bach Project off to a strong start with 'St. Matthew Passion'

    April 21, 2011

    Nobody undertakes lightly a performance of that pinnacle of German Protestant sacred music, J.S. Bach's "St. Matthew Passion." This musically formidable setting of Christ's suffering, death and burial requires top-notch vocal, choral and instrumental forces, and an inspired conductor at the helm, if Bach's epic Crucifixion drama is to become the great devotional experience the composer intended.

  • Anthony Freud to become new general director of Lyric Opera

    April 21, 2011

    Chicago's great opera companies have been run by men and women of singular artistic vision, not all of them savvy enough in the ways of business to keep those companies thriving. In Anthony Freud, Lyric Opera of Chicago has hired what its board believes is both kinds of arts executive, a passionate opera lover who also knows how to keep subscribers content and balance the books.

  • COT's 'Medea' gives the mythic sorceress a modern makeover

    April 20, 2011

    From the first production he put on at Chicago Opera Theater since becoming the company's general director in 2000 – Claudio Monteverdi's "Orfeo" – Brian Dickie has waged a valiant campaign to introduce local opera lovers to new repertory, new sound worlds and freshly contemporary concepts in staging.

  • Muti, CSO feel the love all weekend at Carnegie Hall

    April 17, 2011

    The strategy behind Riccardo Muti's conquest of Carnegie Hall over the weekend could hardly have been better calculated.

  • Under Gatti, French National Orchestra focuses on style, color

    April 14, 2011

    A great deal has happened with the Orchestre National de France in the more than 25 years since the Paris-based ensemble last performed in the Chicago area. Most of that has been for the good, as its concert Wednesday night at Symphony Center suggested.

  • Bach's 'Matthew Passion' gets rare Chicago performance during Holy Week

    April 13, 2011

    Among the great sacred choral masterpieces, J.S. Bach's "St. Matthew Passion" is an Everest only the hardiest of climbers may tackle. The German master's timeless setting of the Crucifixion story has become a Holy Week tradition in many parts of the Christian world, notably in the Netherlands where hundreds of professional and amateur orchestras and choruses throughout the country present it each year on Palm Sunday.

  • Muti knocks debut out of park

    September 19, 2010

    The official launch of the Riccardo Muti era at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra called for a lot more than a nice little concert in the park.

  • Nally steps down from Lyric chorus post

    July 27, 2010

    Donald Nally, chorus master of Lyric Opera of Chicago since 2007, will leave the company following the 2010-11 season to concentrate on non-operatic choral conducting and new music.

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