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Embassies choose her for outreach in Serbia, Croatia

How about this?  Jones the doper now a diplomat for U.S.

Embassies choose Marion Jones for U.S. outreach

I hadn't heard anything about defrocked Olympic track and field champion Marion Jones in the three months since her one-year WNBA career ended when she was waived in July by the Tulsa Shock, which went on to become one of the worst teams in pro sports history, with a 3-31 record.

On The Town: Weekend events

On The Town: Weekend events

Chicago events this weekend, including Buddy Guy, Method Man, Marsha Ambrosius, Bill Engvall, Bob Newhart, Hollows and The Damned.

Odds and ends: Unusual stories you may have missed

Unusual stories you may have missed

Lions and tigers and bears, plus other unusual stories you may have missed.

John von Rhein

John von Rhein

Classical music critic

E-mail
Despite deficit, CSO says it's fiscally sound

Despite deficit, CSO says it's fiscally sound

October 19, 2011

There was bad news and good news to report at Wednesday's annual meeting of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association, the orchestra's parent body.

  • Pianist Paul Lewis upholds lofty standard of previous Schubert recitals here

    October 18, 2011

    The Symphony Center Presents Piano Series began Sunday afternoon the way it had ended in May, with Paul Lewis taking his listeners on an absorbing adventure into Schubert.

  • Vocal crisis behind him, tenor Giuseppe Filianoti is busy riding opera's fast track

    October 18, 2011

    Operatic stardom can be a heavy cross to bear. Particularly, it would appear, for tenors. One by one, high-voiced male singers heavily touted for stellar careers are finding those careers derailed, or put on hold.

  • MusicNOW series opener short on substance, fuzzy in presentation

    October 18, 2011

    I am all for MusicNOW, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's contemporary music series, trying new things and experimenting with different program formats. (If producers of new music concerts can't do that, who will?) But the attempt to vary the presentation of the opening concert of the series' 11th season, Monday night at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, yielded more fizzle than sizzle.

  • CSO debut by gifted Finnish maestra was well worth the wait

    October 14, 2011

    The only question that arose following Susanna Malkki's impressive podium debut with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Thursday night at Symphony Center was: Why did it take so long?

  • Kirkby spins vocal gold in Baroque Band's opener

    October 13, 2011

    There is a measure of irony in the fact that Baroque Band should take the adventures of Lewis Carroll's beloved Alice as the theme of its fifth-anniversary season. Like the young literary heroine, Chicago's period-instrument ensemble has fallen down a couple of rabbit holes of its own over the years. Funding has been problematic, and last season the group suffered growing pains on the artistic and administrative sides.

  • A heroine goes sweetly daft as Donizetti's greatest hit returns to Lyric Opera repertory

    October 12, 2011

    Call it a perfect storm of Donizetti operas.

  • Muti, CSO run an Italian marathon in honor of the Mahler centenary

    October 7, 2011

    This year orchestras all over the world are mounting any number of programs to commemorate the centenary of Gustav Mahler's death. You may safely assume that none of them will be as unusual or enterprising as the one Riccardo Muti is conducting as the final subscription program of his fall residency this weekend at Symphony Center.

  • Tenor Polenzani taking operatic stardom one role at a time

    October 5, 2011

    The opera world keeps waiting for the next hot tenor discovery, when in fact he may already have arrived.

  • Jane Glover knocks on Beethoven's door -- and a promising new chamber orchestra debuts

    October 3, 2011

    Evanston was the place to be for classical music aficionados over the weekend when two ensembles, one an established mainstay of the area's music life, the other just starting up, began their seasons.

  • Strong cast anchors a strong and joyous opener at Lyric

    October 3, 2011

    Could Lyric Opera of Chicago have chosen a more appropriate work with which to launch a new season, and a new era, than Jacques Offenbach's "Les Contes d'Hoffmann" ("The Tales of Hoffmann")?

  • Muti, CSO pay eloquent homage to the Franz Liszt bicentennial

    October 2, 2011

    The Chicago Symphony Orchestra is devoting a sizable portion of its current season to works composed 100 years ago, during a period that witnessed extraordinary creative ferment in music. The year 1911 marked a major turning point – the death of Gustav Mahler, a key figure in the evolution from post-Romanticism to modernism. Riccardo Muti and other conductors will pay extended homage to the composer, beginning with the maestro's concerts next weekend.

  • Lyric Opera preview: A heartbroken poet, a distraught bride and a power-mad czar — and that's just for openers

    September 29, 2011

    As Lyric Opera of Chicago enters a brave new era with a brave new regime, the company more than ever wants to be your destination for live musical and theatrical adventures of the sort you can't find anywhere else. Or so it insists.

  • Spirited maestra Chen launches orchestra's new season, new era

    September 27, 2011

    Chicago is her kind of town.

  • Through music, Muti brings message of hope to incarcerated youth

    September 26, 2011

    One girl swayed with the rhythm of the music as the unfamiliar sounds of Mozart and Bellini washed over her. Another girl couldn't wait to voice her verdict on the performance she had just heard.

  • Less gala than usual, CSO Symphony Ball shines anyway, thanks to Muti and Bronfman

    September 26, 2011

    Having brought music to ordinary Chicagoans two nights earlier at a free, hands-across-the-community concert in the city's Woodlawn neighborhood, Riccardo Muti took time Saturday evening to make nice with the swells whose bucks are a financial bulwark of theChicago Symphony Orchestra.

  • Less gala than usual, CSO Symphony Ball shines anyway, thanks to Muti and Bronfman

    September 25, 2011

    Having brought music to ordinary Chicagoans two nights earlier at a free, hands-across-the-community concert in the city's Woodlawn neighborhood, Riccardo Muti took time Saturday evening to make nice with the swells whose bucks are a financial bulwark of theChicago Symphony Orchestra.

  • For CSO season opener, Muti puts his music where his mission is

    September 23, 2011

    Riccardo Muti believes in opening his Chicago Symphony Orchestra seasons not in the ensemble's Michigan Avenue citadel of high culture but in the neighborhoods of Chicago. That way he can bring symphonic masterpieces almost literally to the doorsteps of ordinary citizens, touching their lives with music they may never have experienced before and, in so doing, making ours a better society.

  • Keith Conant: Longtime violist with Lyric Opera Orchestra

    September 21, 2011

    His many friends and colleagues in the Chicago musical community remember Keith Conant as a superb and dedicated musician whose gentle soul shone through his performances.

  • Sinfonietta's new maestra makes diversity her mantra

    September 20, 2011

    In early August, just days into her first week on the job, Mei-Ann Chen was doing a breathless listening tour around Chicago.

  • Ludwig rocks! Inaugural fest a barrier-blasting banquet of Beethoven (and others)

    September 20, 2011

    The music of Ludwig van Beethoven has been inextricably woven into the standard classical repertory for so long that it's easy to take that music for granted. Indeed, Beethoven cycles and festivals built around his music have become commonplace in an era when the German master's very name strikes joy in the hearts of beleaguered marketing directors.

  • From Muti to Mussorgsky, an eventful season

    September 16, 2011

    Autumn is when Chicago's classical music organizations put some of their fanciest wares on the market. More presenters are doing so than ever, leaving audience members to face an ever more bewildering array of choices. Which events you opt to attend will, of course, depend on your artistic tastes, time, budget and other factors. May the following, admittedly personal, selection of fall classical highlights guide you in the right directions.

  • Classical recording is alive and well – just ask Chicago musicians

    September 14, 2011

    With the major classical labels having virtually ceased making recordings in Chicago, it's good to see local classical musicians taking charge of their own destinies on disc, with a little help from their friends at several small, indie recording companies. Several worthy new CD releases suggest the prognosticators of gloom and doom were wrong.

  • Lyric, Merit School partnership aims to foster new voices

    September 12, 2011

    Nine months ago, when Lyric Opera named Renee Fleming to its newly created post of creative consultant, the superstar soprano excitedly outlined a broad agenda of plans she had for the company, including creating new projects, expanding the Lyric's education program and collaborating with other Chicago arts organizations and music schools.

  • Passion's in the mantra, music at Lyric sampler

    September 12, 2011

    It's a new era and a whole new ballgame at Lyric Opera of Chicago. And passion is Lyric's big pitch.

  • Haymarket Opera Company makes stylish debut with Handel rarity

    September 11, 2011

    Many opera-goers know Handel's delightful pastoral, "Acis and Galatea," composed for an outdoor performance in England in 1718. But how many also know its precursor, "Aci, Galatea e Polifemo" ("Acis, Galatea and Polyphemus"), a lengthy serenade cum cantata Handel wrote for a wedding in Naples 10 years earlier?

  • Lyric's new ads reach out to the wary

    September 8, 2011

    Lyric Opera of Chicago is pumping more passion into its sales pitches.

  • For Paul Winberg, taking up executive post at Grant Park is a homecoming

    September 6, 2011

    Given the inert economy, nonprofit performing arts organizations looking to fill top leadership positions are honing in ever more zealously on candidates with exceptional track records in marketing and development. Lyric Opera's recent appointment of Anthony Freud of the Houston Grand Opera as its new general director is one example. The Grant Park Music Festival's appointment of Paul Winberg as its new executive director is another.

  • Muti bids arrivederci to opera in Salzburg with superior Verdi 'Macbeth'

    August 30, 2011

    SALZBURG, Austria – The Salzburg Festival, the toniest of the big European summer arts festivals, has long traded on the world's top starpower. No more gleaming stars of classical music illuminated Mozart's town this month than Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, although opera, theater and many concerts and recitals also packed the season, which ended on Tuesday.

  • Conquering Continent a proud CSO tradition

    August 19, 2011

    For decades, overseas touring has been a strategic element for American symphony orchestras seeking to fortify their international reputations and strengthen their support bases back home.

  • Lyric Opera musicians contract accord

    August 18, 2011

    Lyric Opera of Chicago and the American Guild of Musical Artists (AGMA) reached tentative agreement Tuesday night on a contract for the 2011-12 season. No details of the settlement were forthcoming.

  • Haymarket Opera to address need for a 'period' opera company in Chicago

    August 16, 2011

    How does it happen that a city now widely recognized as the Midwest hub for historically informed performances by period instrumentalists has done next to nothing on behalf of "period" opera?

  • Union threatens Lyric Opera with strike

    August 13, 2011

    The union representing the principal singers, chorus members, dancers, actors and production staff at Lyric Opera of Chicago has sent a letter to its members warning them to "be prepared for an opening night strike" on Oct. 1, when the company is scheduled to open its season with a gala performance of Offenbach's "The Tales of Hoffmann."

  • Philharmonia Baroque handles 'Orlando'

    August 13, 2011

    Despite ongoing, well-meaning efforts, Chicago has yet to establish a period instruments orchestra that can rival the best national and international brands. So visits here by such ensembles as the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra can be inspirational, showing local musicians what can be done with applied talent and perseverance.

  • Five-pianist concerto makes an enjoyable premiere at Ravinia

    August 11, 2011

    This is the week when the Ravinia incarnation of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra gets down with the worlds of pop and crossover.

  • Conductor McGegan brings Handel's Orlando to Ravinia

    August 10, 2011

    Of the conductors who bestride the realms of modern and period orchestral performance, Nicholas McGegan may truly be said to command the best of both worlds. Players in modern orchestras welcome his refreshingly nondogmatic approach to obtaining the results he wants, while members of the period-instrument ensembles he directs appreciate the many insights into the Baroque and Classical styles he brings to their collaborations.

  • Tweets, texts not for everyone in arts world

    August 8, 2011

    Like performing arts organizations everywhere else, the heavy hitters of classical music in Chicago are desperately seeking new ways to connect with wired younger audiences and lure them into concert halls and opera houses to fill vacant seats.

  • For Ryan Center diva and divo wannabes, it's 'Lyric-palooza'

    August 8, 2011

    The Grant Park Orchestra went underground over the weekend when it presented its annual vocal showcase for members of Lyric Opera's professional artist development program, the Ryan Opera Center. A large, enthusiastic audience Friday at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance was treated to a classical alternative to Lollapalooza just across the way. Call it Lyric-palooza.

  • Mahler cycle gets choral kick in finale

    August 6, 2011

    For his contribution to the worldwide observance of the centenary of Gustav Mahler's death, James Conlon ended at the beginning. Which is to say the music director wrapped up his Ravinia cycle of the Mahler symphonies Thursday night with a vividly dramatic account of "Das klagende Lied" ("The Song of Lamentation"), the first Mahler score the composer found worthy of preservation.

  • Bryn Terfel's artful song recital captivates at Ravinia

    August 4, 2011

    Bryn Terfel can command a stage whether he's thundering as Wotan, king of the Wagnerian gods, in "Die Walkure," or singing a lullaby from his native Wales.

  • He's the hottest young composer around. But catching Nico Muhly isn't easy.

    August 2, 2011

    Nico Muhly apologized for missing our phone interview. By an entire day, as it turned out.

  • Singers, CSO deliver thrilling 'Tosca'

    August 1, 2011

    Riccardo Muti may claim the Chicago Symphony Orchestra as his prized operatic "pit band" during the downtown season, but the privilege of employing the orchestra in concert guise during the Ravinia season reverts to its summer music director, James Conlon. These Conlon-led opera performances are invariably among the highlights of the hot-weather months here, giving the CSO a chance to kick back in repertory it doesn't get to play very often.

  • Epic 'Kullervo' brings bracing gust of icy Nordic air to Grant Park

    July 30, 2011

    "Kullervo" represents a side of Jean Sibelius' output few American listeners know. Completed in 1892 and based on the Finnish mythology known as the Kalevala (a source of inspiration throughout his life), this early, five-movement work is less a symphony than a series of symphonic poems, with a cantata embedded in the middle. Because Sibelius forbade performances during his lifetime, the piece had to wait until 1958, the year after his death, to receive its premiere.

  • Muti book a compelling saga of a rich life lived in music

    July 27, 2011

    As he approaches his 70th birthday on Thursday, Riccardo Muti is entering a phase of his international career in which consolidation is the keynote. After a half-century in music, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra music director feels the time has come to focus on priorities.

  • Conlon, CSO rock Ravinia with Rachmaninov rarities

    July 23, 2011

    Rachmaninov can always be relied upon to lure warm bodies into concert venues, especially in the lazy, hazy, crazy days of summer. True to that formula, James Conlon trotted out one of the composer's greatest hits, the "Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini," to provide a glittering finish to his concert with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Thursday night at Ravinia.

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