Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart is considered by many to be the greatest composer ever. And his 27 piano concertos may be his finest work. But Mozart had a formula for the 27 and he used it over and over ...
Every Tuesday through January we're spending a few minutes with Mozart authority Nicholas Kenyon, to talk about specific recordings. Kenyon manages the Proms concerts for the BBC when he's not writing ...
The K595 Concerto stands out on its own. There’s something quite particular about it that started in K503 and K537 – concertos that immediately preceded it and that are already a little bit different ...
A youthful recording of Mozart from pianist Alessio Bax and Southbank Sinfonia. Drive Featured Album, 11 March 2013. Following on from his acclaimed recording of Brahms piano music, Italian pianist ...
Mozart’s piano concertos stand at the pinnacle of the Classical repertoire. They reach out to embrace and delight their listeners even as they challenge and enthrall the performers with their ...
Animation and grace distinguish these wise and beguiling performances of three Mozart piano concertos. The American pianist Leon Fleisher, now in his early eighties, is enjoying an Indian summer as a ...
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. In the 1780s Mozart took the bold step of throwing himself into life as a freelance composer. Rather than ...
Get Access To Every Broadway Story Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. The program will begin with Mozart's Piano ...
Celebrate Sir Neville Marriner's 90th birthday with this exciting new recording. Aled Jones' Album of the Week, 31 March 2014. Sir Neville and the Academy provide spritely and vivid accompaniment and ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Notebook Robert Levin has long argued that Mozart would have made up new material while performing, and he follows the master in a series of ...
Mozart was born 250 years ago this month, and it’s the centenary of Shostakovich‘s birth in September. Bernard Haitink joined the London Symphony Orchestra to kick start the New Year with Mozart’s ...
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