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There was only a single performance of an exhilarating CSO concert this past Saturday evening. It attracted a packed house ...
Tristan und Isolde — returning to the Philadelphia Orchestra for the first time since 1934 — is something that great musicians long to live up to and hold for conditions to be as right as they can be.
JoAnn Falletta conducts the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra in music by Leonard Bernstein, Aaron Copland, Alberto Ginastera, ...
While what happened on Friday night at Minneapolis’ Orchestra Hall didn’t reach that level of career breakthrough, it was ...
The probabilistic SINR constraints in general have no closed-form expression and are difficult to handle. Based on a Bernstein-type inequality for quadratic forms of complex Gaussian random variables, ...
We don’t often think of Shostakovich symphonies as “fun.” And, seeing the composer’s name on the program Thursday night, many in the Meyerson Symphony Center audience may have been ...
As the Proms head back to London, another season of music variety beckons. Nick Kimberley picks out the ones worth grabbing ...
Every year, the BBC Proms runs the risk of trying so hard to please everybody that they end up pleasing nobody. The complaints are many and varied: too much (or not enough) non-classical music ...
Today, prominent investor rights law firm Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann LLP (“BLB&G”) filed a class action lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana ...
Shostakovich’s “Symphony No. 6” has a slow, long movement to begin and then two shorter, faster ones to finish. As the BSO began, the beauty of their string tones was immediately clear.
Richard Bernstein was flipping through a medical trade journal in 1969 when he saw an advertisement for a device that could check blood-sugar levels in one minute with one drop of blood.