Posts

Listening During Covid, Part 13 — Music of Brazil and Other Latin American Countries, Religious Consolation from Post-WW I England, and an Operatic Novel

July 29, 2022
Posted in , , , ,

New recordings serve up fine performances of music from Latin America, Brazil, and post-1918 England. And a novel sends its main character back two centuries into Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro.

Classical Album Review: What Is American — PUBLIQuartet

July 28, 2022
Posted in , ,

American-ness in music is impossible to define and constantly in flux, yet the threads that connect it all together – at once beautiful, tragic, humorous, ironic, whimsical – are all somehow recognizable.

Classical Album Review: Weill & Shostakovich Symphonies

July 28, 2022
Posted in , , ,

Taken together, this is a release that showcases both the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra and its chief conductor – as well as their repertoire choices – in a brilliant light.

Book Review: “The Crossroads of Civilization” — Vienna as Bridge Builder Between East and West

July 27, 2022
Posted in , ,

Angus Robertson has written a thoroughly enjoyable history of Vienna that is both accurate and entertaining.

2022 Newport Folk Festival Review: An Occasion for Awe

July 27, 2022
Posted in , ,

The Newport Folk Festival’s biggest secrets were cleanly hidden and tightly executed with the day-capping revelations of Paul Simon and Joni Mitchell.

Jazz Concert Review: Two Trios Bring Compositional Acumen to Spontaneous Collective Improvisation

July 27, 2022
Posted in , , ,

Such a beautiful evening of music — two relatively concise sets, one an hour long, another a little less — adding up to an integral whole.

Jazz Interview: A Conversation with Music Promoter Alex Lemski 

July 27, 2022
Posted in , , ,

“Music here is great, cutting edge. But to get an audience anywhere you need to get covered … Promoting is a struggle, dealing with the lack of media coverage.”

Arts Appreciation: Long Overdue — Homage to Julius Eastman, Fierce Black Queen Iconoclast

July 26, 2022
Posted in , , ,

Scorned and consigned to oblivion in his day, Julius Eastman is finally being celebrated for his unabashed talent and the sheer audacity of his inimitable genius. Brava diva!

Jazz Album Reviews: Two From Guitarist Albare — One Sedately Traditional, the Other More Satisfyingly Adventurous

July 26, 2022
Posted in , , ,

Albare Plays Jobim: A Tribute to Antonio Carlos Jobim is a traditional Brazilian offering, content to offer soothing Bossa Nova rhythms; Freedom is more unconventional, merging Brazilian beats with jazzier improvisations.

Book Review: “Making Tracks: A Record Producer’s Southern Roots Music Journey”

July 26, 2022
Posted in , , ,

A music aficionado-turned-record producer shares his indelible memories of life on the road and in the studio, working with such artists Sleepy LaBeef, Irma Thomas, James Booker, Solomon Burke, Buckwheat Zydeco, and Ruth Brown.

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Categories

Archives