Previews

Michael Zwiebach - June 29, 2012

For opera lovers and novices alike, this concert is the perfect
way to explore the riches of opera and experience the
versatility and talent of the Merola artists.

Michael Zwiebach - June 29, 2012

What you really want on July 4, if this is a major holiday for you, is a big, traditional band concert.

Trista Bernstein - June 26, 2012

Walnut Creek’s esteemed Festival Opera renews itself with a new plan, to sustain its vitality while cutting the budget.

Michael Zwiebach - June 19, 2012

If you want a fair that features great music, look no further than Festival Opera's Opera in the Park.

Michael Zwiebach - June 19, 2012

By now, if you haven’t heard of Classical Revolution, the chamber music collective that specializes in bringing classical music to local neighborhood venues, you’re behind the times.

Michael Zwiebach - June 19, 2012

Every year, Sarah Cahill and New Music Bay Area’s Garden of Memory concert offers a special way to celebrate summer.

Michael Zwiebach - June 7, 2012

The Bay Area harbors a number of excellent composers who regularly fly under the radar. One of these is Kurt Rohde, a Rome-prize winner of a few years back. The Left Coast Ensemble regularly premieres his work and this week they’re taking on another of his pieces,...maestoso ...misterioso on a concert titled Delicacies for Diverse Ensembles.

Michael Zwiebach - June 7, 2012

Improbable as the revival of Handel operas might have seemed 30 years ago, many of them are now regularly programmed internationally. From being the province of early-music specialists, the fortunate Handelian few have escaped shelf-confinement into the broader repertory.

Michael Zwiebach - June 7, 2012

This piano competition, though it is not extremely well-known, has a first-class international jury headed by Antonio Pompa-Baldi. Instead of a final round with full orchestra and contestants playing concertos, this competition features a final round of piano trios (quite an assignment for the two string players hired).

Jason Victor Serinus - June 6, 2012

A slain leader in the gay rights movement, San Francisco’s own Harvey Milk, is the subject of a new cantata that employs some of his unknown speeches.