Previews

Michael Zwiebach - May 13, 2010

This weekend, Fremont Symphony puts you on the Great White Way, with a spring pops salute to Broadway musicals. Wicked, The Producers, Aida and a number of classic shows from Annie Get Your Gun to Fiddler on the Roof will share the bill, with soloists and orchestra under Greg “Suds” Sudmeier.

Michael Zwiebach - May 11, 2010

The St. Lawrence String Quartet estimates they've given about 2,000 concerts in their 20 years together. They never hold back in performance, and every chance to see them is special, although, thankfully, not rare. This weekend the group anchors the final Sundays@Four concert of the season at the Crowden Music Center in Berkeley.

Jeff Kaliss - May 11, 2010

Ever-curious and adventurous, violinist Rachel Barton Pine reunites with Michael Morgan, her former mentor, and the Sacramento Philharmonic to showcase a suite by African-American classical composer William Grant Still and a concerto by Sergei Prokofiev.

Michael Zwiebach - May 11, 2010

The Irene Dalis Vocal Competition may not ring bells of recognition in your head, but young singers are way ahead of you. That’s because the four-year-old competition, which kicks into gear May 22 at the California Theatre in San José, puts a lot of cash in singers’ pockets.

Kaneez Munjee - May 10, 2010

Chora Nova performs one of Rossini’s greatest works, the Petite Messe solennelle — neither little, solemn, nor even really a Mass — on May 29, under the direction of Paul Flight, providing an opportunity to hear this Mass in something close to its original version.

Joseph Sargent - May 10, 2010

Many of the pieces Earplay performs have Bay Area roots, part of conductor Mary Chun’s stated emphasis on giving voice to local composers. For its May 24 concert, “Ports and Portals,” held at Herbst Theatre in partnership with the S.F. International Arts Festival, the ensemble adds two more world premieres and two West Coast premieres to the tally.

Michael Zwiebach - May 4, 2010

The Young People's Symphony Orchestra concludes their season with the always-surprising concerto competition winners.

Lisa Petrie - May 4, 2010

Conductor Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony and Chorus champion the “new” once again. In concerts May 19-23, they tackle a monumental, relatively obscure choral work by Stravinsky, while introducing the brilliant talents of EXAUDI, guest vocal soloists from the U.K.

Jeff Kaliss - May 4, 2010

Andrew McKenna Lee has always been drawn to the sort of "rolling polyphony" of the classical guitar. For his Old First Concerts recital here on May 21, Lee will span the guitar repertoire, from Scarlatti to Milhaud, and he’ll showcase his own physically demanding and aurally dynamic Five Refractions of a Prelude by Bach. 

Jason Victor Serinus - May 4, 2010

Pamela Z's Baggage Allowance is a sonically and visually layered work that explores baggage in all its literal and metaphorical permutations. With the world premiere on Friday, the composer once again promises to bend genres and defy categorization.