In the last days of July he Finnish pianist Tuija Hakkila left behind the endless summer twilights of her own country for a few days of lower latitudes and earlier nightfalls in Upstate New York. At ...
Pianist Jeremy Denk has secured his place in the pantheon of great American performers--as well as in the hearts of Berkeley audiences--through keen interpretive insight and captivating virtuosity.
Edward Aldwell, who died Sunday at 68, was a pianist and authority on the music of Bach, as well as a teacher of music theory and piano at the Mannes College of Music in New York and the Curtis ...
Bach’s Birthday Bash 2025 will feature Jeremy Denk performing The Complete Keyboard Partitas at Mechanics Hall. This celebration of Bach's music offers audiences a chance to experience Denk's ...
On Saturday night in GBH’s Calderwood Studio, pianist Jeremy Denk performed the complete Book 1 of Bach’s beloved ‘Well-Tempered Clavier.’ Bach would have been amazed by Saturday night’s performance ...
Ars Lyrica Houston's harpsichordist and conductor Matthew Dirst collaborates with The Baroque Music Festival, Corona del Mar and The San Francisco Early Music Society (co-presenter) to offer an ...
Colin MacKnight has set himself a challenge that few organists would dare to tackle. MacKnight, director of music at Little Rock's Trinity Cathedral, is already in the midst of a Herculean task -- to ...
Ars Lyrica Houston’s harpsichordist and conductor Matthew Dirst will collaborate with The Baroque Music Festival, Corona del Mar, and The San Francisco Early Music Society to offer an immersive ...
We'll hear the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, joined by pianist and conductor Murray Perahia (peh-REYE-ah), with the Keyboard Concerto No. 4 in A by Bach. (Sony Classical SK 89245) 5:00 ...
Frederick Chiu is back, this time with the Budapest Strings and music by J.S. Bach (1685-1750). We hear Bach's Keyboard Concerto in D minor.
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Notebook With “Inventions/Reinventions,” Dan Tepfer fills out Bach’s missing two-part inventions ...