Previews

Michelle Dulak Thomson - October 17, 2011

Ensemble Caprice’s program for the San Francisco Early Music Society focuses on the Gypsies, surveying three centuries’ worth of Gypsy-influenced “classical” music.

David Bratman - October 17, 2011

The South Bay's major premiere of the season is a new work by the leading Argentinian-born composer Osvaldo Golijov, performed by the St. Lawrence String Quartet in the Stanford Lively Arts series.

David Bratman - October 17, 2011

The Cypress String Quartet is bringing in renowned cellist Gary Hoffman to help them play Schubert's masterpiece, the String Quintet in C Major.

Jeff Dunn - October 17, 2011

Let’s hear it for “More power to the cello!” The L.A. Philharmonic and its dynamic director arrive in town with Johannes Moser his plugged in instrument.

Ken Bullock - October 12, 2011

The radical, sometimes wacky, music of composer/pianist John Cage receives a hearing on the Stanford campus.

Marianne Lipanovich - October 10, 2011

Singing “in the key of life” continues to be the mission of Cantare Con Vivo, now celebrating its 25th year of song and service.

Michael Zwiebach - October 10, 2011

The San Francisco Friends of Chamber Music provide a nice classical chamber series at the Legion of Honor, but their signature event has quickly become Chamber Music Day at the de Young Museum.

Trista Bernstein - October 10, 2011

New twists (and languages) in works by Ravel and Schoenberg mark the treatment of the Sounds New ensemble.

Jeff Dunn - October 10, 2011

If you’ve been dying to hear Shostakovich, his Symphony No. 14 is the one for you

Jason Victor Serinus - October 10, 2011

Possessed of a large, rich, flexible voice that works equally well in Verdi, Wagner, and Handel, Stephanie Blythe leaves all that behind to once again champion American music in recital.