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Deceptive Cadence
10:36 am
Wed July 18, 2012

The Operatic Occupations Puzzler

Credit Patrick Riviere / Getty Images
Jose Carbo (left) is the wily title character in a Sydney Opera House production of Rossini's Il barbieri di Siviglia.

Jobs, jobs, jobs. Who needs them, who's going to get them and who might lose them? It's a hot topic on the campaign trail. With the addition of only about 80,000 jobs last month, the June unemployment rate remained at a stubborn 8.2 percent.

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Deceptive Cadence
11:01 am
Tue July 17, 2012

Young Conductor Steers A Vivid, Drug-Addled Dream

Originally published on Wed July 18, 2012 10:20 am

Robin Ticciati is the principal conductor of the Scottish Chamber Orchestra and principal guest conductor of the Bamberg Symphony in Germany. He's conducted at the Metropolitan Opera and just finished a run of Britten's Peter Grimes at La Scala. Ticciati has also been tapped to take over England's storied Glyndebourne Festival Opera in 2014. And did I mention he's under 30?

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Deceptive Cadence
2:08 pm
Mon July 16, 2012

Beethoven — For A Buck

Credit courtesy of the artist
HJ Lim, the rising pianist whose nine-hour Beethoven cycle shot to No. 1 on the Billboard classical chart.

Originally published on Tue September 18, 2012 4:21 pm

To own all the piano sonatas Beethoven wrote, you used to have to buy at least 10 CDs and spend $50, $75, $100 — or more.

What if I told you that you could get them for less than $10? That's about $1 per hour of music.

That's right — the "Moonlight," "Appassionata," "Waldstein" and all your other favorites, for just $9.99!

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Deceptive Cadence
2:03 am
Sat July 14, 2012

Tanglewood: Celebrating Beethoven In The Backwoods For 75 Years

Credit Hilary Scott / Boston Symphony
Christoph von Dohnanyi and the Boston Symphony play Beethoven in the opening night concert of the Tanglewood Festival's 75th anniversary.

Originally published on Tue September 18, 2012 4:22 pm

It now seems like a natural rite of summer — open-air classical music festivals where audiences can hear great music while picnicking under the stars. But 75 years ago, when the Boston Symphony first performed on a former estate called Tanglewood in the Berkshire Mountains of Western Massachusetts, it was a novel idea.

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Deceptive Cadence
2:35 pm
Fri July 13, 2012

Around The Classical Internet: July 13, 2012

Credit Charles Ludeke for NPR
Conductor Kent Tritle in Times Square. (And that's WNYC's John Schaefer in the Saratoga T-shirt.)
  • So we did this thing in Times Square, and some people have seen the video.
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Music Reviews
12:56 pm
Fri July 13, 2012

Tanglewood Celebrates 75th With Free Web Stream

Credit courtesy of Tanglewood
The scene at Tanglewood.

Originally published on Sun July 15, 2012 10:53 am

On July 20, 1958, at Tanglewood — the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra — pianist Leon Fleisher played an electrifying Brahms First Piano Concerto with the orchestra under its former music director, Pierre Monteux. This remarkable teaming has not been heard since then.

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Deceptive Cadence
11:58 am
Fri July 13, 2012

Sweatin' To The (Really) Oldies

Credit Pablo Helguera

Originally published on Tue September 18, 2012 4:22 pm

Got an idea for a classical cartoon, or a reaction to this one? Leave your thoughts in the comments section.

Pablo Helguera is a New York-based artist working with sculpture, drawing, photography and performance. You can see more of his work at Artworld Salon and on his own site.

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Deceptive Cadence
12:25 pm
Wed July 11, 2012

How Is 'Fifty Shades Of Grey' Selling Classical Music?

Credit courtesy of Vintage/Anchor Books
The book behind the unlikely re-emergence of Thomas Tallis' 'Spem in alium.'

Originally published on Tue September 18, 2012 4:22 pm

File this under Strange Bedfellows. The crazy-huge success of E L James' Fifty Shades erotic trilogy — which as of late May stood at more than 10 million sales in all formats and 60 physical printings, according to publisher Vintage Books — has made quite the impact in ... classical music, of all things.

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Deceptive Cadence
12:03 pm
Fri July 6, 2012

Behind The Music: Charles Ives

Credit Pablo Helguera

Originally published on Tue September 18, 2012 4:23 pm

Got an idea for a classical cartoon, or a reaction to this one? Leave your thoughts in the comments section.

Pablo Helguera is a New York-based artist working with sculpture, drawing, photography and performance. You can see more of his work at Artworld Salon and on his own site.

Read more

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