CD Reviews | CTD (Briefly Noted) | JFL (Dip Your Ears) | DVD Reviews

19.5.13

It's Raining Cats and Cash

There's a cool rain falling in New York City, at the Museum of Modern Art. The Rain Room, by Random International, is a field of falling water that pauses wherever a human body is detected: there may be no need to carry an umbrella again. Think of yourself as Moses. I don't know how many sensors it takes to run this project, but it's quite interesting and fun. The faster you walk, the more you actually get a bit wet. This will be a very popular exhibit once New York starts to heat up.

Also at MoMA is, Claes Oldenburg: The Street and the Store. This is a wonderful collection of early works, made with wire, fabric, and plaster, proving that some of the best art can be made simply and quite raw. These Oldenburgs reminded me of the early work of Red Grooms, also working in NYC at this time, and some of his best, too. With success many artists have their work professionally fabricated, especially large commissions, which tends to lose the quirky spontaneity. But here at the beginning it was pure inspiration-in, inspiration-out: it had soul.


By contrast there is a two mega-gallery expo, at David Zwirner and Gagosian Gallery, by Jeff Koons that is the antithesis of the Oldenburg exhibit. It's big, it's gaudy, and about as superficial as art can get today and selling briskly for lots of cash. Something that Zwirner has avoided until now are the armies of security guards that every Gagosian exhibit has. This is his first time showing Koons, which in itself created a stir. Zwirner had only one guard during my visit, which may be a requirement to show the artist's work. The guard-ification of galleries is just creepy.

To pile on to this saga, the irrepressible and often wonderfully sick artist Paul McCarthy, in Koons fashion, is showing some very large work at Hauser & Wirth. He was also the creator of a big red Koons-like inflatable, Balloon Dog, that greeted visitors to the recent Frieze Art Fair in New York. The always dependable Roberta Smith nails the battle of the big boy's toys.


Everyone likes a little spectacle now and then. I thought the Koons mix up at the Versailles Palace in 2009 was perfect, excess beyond all excess. Maybe we are in need a revolution!

Craving some simple elegance I headed over to Lori Bookstein for a second time to see Elena Sisto's closely cropped figure paintings. Pared down to the necessities, pattern and form, total bliss.

I can walk all over New York, see hundreds of works of art, and often it's the unexpected that sticks in my mind. Not big, flaming, or loud, just sublime goodness. I found that at Steven Harvey Fine Art Projects, in Eleanor Ray's small, 4x4" painting Charlotte's Studio with Sheets. Ray's work is included in a six artist exhibit. I left purged and happy.

18.5.13

Dip Your Ears, No. 138 (Mendelssohn Organ Works)

available at Amazon
F.Mendelssohn-B., Organ Works
Yuval Rabin (Braun/Mathis organ of St.Marzellus, CH)
MDG


Felix Mendelssohn B. was fond of organs and organ music and wrote idiomatically for the instrument. You just can’t hear it in his other compositions (think Bruckner, for contrast), and since you just about never hear Mendelssohn’s organ music in recital or concert either, that part of his output—limited as it is—remains ignored. A pity, I suppose, since his organ writing, like so much of Mendelssohn in any genre, can be uncommonly attractive. In the best of his organ works, he melds his gift for tunes with the structure of Bach—most of all in the wholly winning Three Preludes and Fugues (written and revised between 1833 and 1837) that open this collection.

Before delving into two of Mendelssohn’s six sonatas, Israeli organist and Mendelssohn-expert Yuval Rabin throws in the sweetly angelic Andante in D major (1844) and the brief adventurous double-Fugue of the Andante in G minor (1833). He commands the light and brightly colorful instrument of picturesque St. Marzellus in Gersau (idyllically situated on the shore of Lake Lucerne)—painstakingly restored to its original early 19th century state just last year, mechanical action, wedge-bellows, and all—and therefore an organ very much of Mendelssohn’s time.

Comparing this recital to a recent release of Mendelssohn’s Organ Sonatas (William Whitehead, Chandos 10532), simply because it happens to be the latest one I’ve heard and was on hand, suggests first and foremost a repertoire-advantage: Switching it up, rather than focusing just on the six 1844 sonatas, makes for a much more varied and interesting program. The sound breathes naturally in the fairly short but open reverb and natural resonance of St. Marzellus, which compares nicely to the small, slightly dull sound of the Buckingham Palace organ with its domestic ring and nasal registrations.

The second of the six opus 65 Sonatas opens with a distinctive, stark motif of separate two-note cells before moving on to the much more melodic, simple, and lyrical character in the Adagio and then cumulating in the complex, busy fugue of the Allegro. The simple F major Andante loosens things up one more time before Rabin gets to work on the fourth Sonata in B-flat major: First a stern toccata (with hints of “St.Anne” / BWV 552), then an Andante religioso (with premonitions of “England’s Lane”), and—penultimately—a particularly delightful and minimally, charmingly voiced*, elegant Allegretto.

The recital closes with Ersatz-Mendelssohn of sorts: Rabin’s Hommage à Mendelssohn is a highly enjoyable set of four Variation-improvisations on the song “Yedid Nefesh” in the style of Mendelssohn… the sort of thing he often does in concerts—especially, he writes in the liner notes—those on Friday, before the Sabbath.

The liner notes are superb: every bit of information an organ aficionado could look for—including the voicing of each individual track (* Hauptwerk: sub-octave coupled Waldflaute 4’, Positif: Gamba 8’, Pedal: Sub Bass 16’, Violoncello 8’ in the above mentioned Allegretto from Sonata No.4, for example)—is included, the notes are informative, and the translation faultless. If you happen to be set up for SACD and MDG’s three dimensional sound (“2+2+2”, four front speakers; two low, two high, and two in the rear) you can enjoy the release’s already excellent sonics in even greater plasticity.

17.5.13

Summer Music Festivals: U.S.


Soprano Angela Meade
What would Ionarts be covering this summer if we had an unlimited travel budget? Here are our picks for the best performances of opera and classical music being presented by American summer festivals.

CINCINNATI OPERA
This may be the summer for my first visit to Cincinnati Opera, primarily because Angela Meade will be the Donna Anna in their production of Don Giovanni (June 13 and 15), and Michelle DeYoung will be the Amneris in their Aida (July 18 to 28), but also for the chance to see Philip Glass's Galileo Galilei (July 11 to 21). There is also Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier (June 27 and 29), in which Sarah Coburn should make a scrumptious Sophie.

OPERA THEATER OF ST. LOUIS
We have not been to St. Louis since 2005, but the chance to see a staging of Smetana's The Kiss (June 16 to 28) might make a trip worthwhile. The rest of the season is less essential, especially a Pirates of Penzance, although the combination of Pagliacci and Il Tabarro (June 1 to 29) has some appeal. There is also the world premiere of Champion, a new jazz opera by Terence Blanchard (June 15 to 30).

SPOLETO FESTIVAL USA
Because the South Carolina festival gets started before summer vacation does, it has been impossible for me to make it there yet. This summer offers two worthy operas, a double-bill of Puccini’s Le Villi and Umberto Giordano’s Mese Mariano (May 25 to June 7) and the American premiere of Matsukaze, Toshio Hosokawa's opera about a traveling monk's encounter with two ghostly sisters.

GLIMMERGLASS FESTIVAL
There are three operas at the little festival on the Finger Lakes this summer, and we would be happy to see all of them, starting with the double-bill of David Lang's Little Match Girl Passion and Pergolesi's Stabat Mater (July 20 to August 22). The Lang piece is one of my favorite new compositions of the last ten years, and the juxtaposition with the older piece is intriguing. For the Wagner anniversary, Francesca Zambello directs The Flying Dutchman (July 6 to August 24), paired with Un Giorno di Regno for the Verdi anniversary (July 21 to August 24).



Giuseppe Verdi
CARAMOOR
Speaking of Angela Meade, she will star in Will Crutchfield's complete performance of Les vêpres siciliennes (July 6), the original grand opera version of the opera Verdi composed for Paris. Match that with more Verdi in French, the four-act version of Don Carlos, starring Jennifer Check and Jennifer Larmore (July 20).

LINCOLN CENTER FESTIVAL
Three contemporary operas are a good reason to go to New York this summer: Lera Auerbach's The Blind (July 9 to 14), another performance of Hosokawa's Matsukaze (July 18 to 20), and Michaels Reise um Erde from Stockhausen's Licht (July 18 to 20).

CASTLETON FESTIVAL
We will always go back for more of Lorin Maazel conducting Puccini, which he does again at the festival he started at his house in Rappahannock County, Virginia, with a production of La Fanciulla del West (July 6 and 12). Verdi gets his play here, too, with the gutsy choice of Otello (July 13 to 28) -- with no tenor announced yet. Guest conductor Antonio Méndez will also lead a double-bill of La Voix Humaine, the play version by Cocteau and the opera version by Poulenc (July 20 and 27). Quite nicely, Mahler is also featured, with performances of the fourth and fifth symphonies, plus a recital of his songs.

SANTA FE OPERA
Our regular summer visit to New Mexico has been on hiatus, but this would be a good summer to go back. The highlights are Rossini's La Donna del Lago (July 13 to August 14), with Joyce DiDonato and Lawrence Brownlee, and the world premiere of Oscar, Theodore Morrison's new opera on the life of Oscar Wilde (July 27 to August 17). Also on this season are Offenbach's Grand Duchess of Gerolstein, Verdi's La Traviata (a revival of the rather odd Laurent Pelly production seen there in 2009), and Mozart's Le Nozze di Figaro (a revival of Jonathan Kent's 2008 staging, again with Susanna Phillips).

CENTRAL CITY OPERA
This quirky little festival in Colorado, which we last visited in 2009, is presenting only two operas this season. It might be worth the trip to see Ned Rorem's Our Town (July 6 to 28).

SEATTLE OPERA
This was almost the summer we made the longest trip of all, to see the August Ring cycle in the other Washington (three complete cycles, from August 4 to 25). So much is good this year, including Greer Grimsley as Wotan, Stephanie Blythe as Fricka, and Stuart Skelton as Siegmund, but to make the trip would require a commitment. I do have an old college friend there...



Tanglewood
TANGLEWOOD
The whole Ionarts family loved the Berkshires so much last year that we are hoping to go back again this summer for Tanglewood's 75th anniversary season. Performances we would enjoy hearing include Mahler's third symphony with Anne Sofie von Otter and Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos (July 6), John Harbison's 1999 opera The Great Gatsby with the Orchestra and Chorus of Emmanuel Music (July 11), the third act of Wagner's Die Walküre with Katarina Dalayman and Bryn Terfel (July 20), the Mahler Chamber Orchestra with Daniel Harding and Paul Lewis (July 24), an all-Mozart program with Christoph Eschenbach and soprano Christine Schäfer (July 26), and a double-bill of Britten's Curlew River and Purcell's Dido and Aeneas with Mark Morris Dance Group (July 31 and August 1).

For contemporary music, try Pierre-Laurent Aimard and the JACK Quartet in music of Carter, Lachenmann, and Stroppa (August 9 and 10), or the U.S. premiere of George Benjamin's opera Written on Skin, conducted by the composer (August 12).

The biggest event of them all, however, will be a performance of Verdi's Requiem Mass under the baton of Andris Nelsons (July 27), the Music Director-designate of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, as announced yesterday.

BARD SUMMERSCAPE
This festival opens with the U.S. stage premiere of Sergey Taneyev's operatic setting of Oresteia (July 26 to August 4). Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company and SITI Company perform their version of that other modern ballet premiered 100 years ago (July 6 and 7), plus lots more Stravinsky (August 9-11 and 16-18).

RAVINIA FESTIVAL
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra has some performances at Ravinia we would like to hear, including a Beethoven-fest with Christoph von Dohnányi and Emanuel Ax (July 11 and 12) and concerts with James Conlon, especially a concert performance of Verdi's Aida with Michelle DeYoung, Roberto Alagna, and Latonia Moore (August 3). If we win the Powerball jackpot tomorrow, put us down for the complete performance of Bartók's six string quartets with the Takács String Quartet (August 5 and 6) and a concert by the new formation of the Emerson Quartet (August 13).

[Edited to add:]
WOLF TRAP OPERA
There is nothing all that exciting from this local company this summer, but I recommend their productions in the Barns, which are generally beautifully mounted and sung. This year that includes Rossini's nutty Il Viaggio a Reims (June 21, 23, 29) and Verdi's masterful Falstaff (August 9, 11, 14, 17). The amplification required for the cavernous outdoor venue is a deal-breaker for opera in my book.

16.5.13

Classical Music Agenda (June 2013)

Summer is at hand, meaning that the pickings get slimmer in the monthly concert agenda for local events. On the other hand, we will also have a summer festival preview coming up, with some of the performances outside of Washington we most want to hear.


Composer James MacMillan
ORCHESTRAS:
Happily the National Symphony Orchestra is extending its season at the Kennedy Center through June, until at the end of the month the summer concerts at Wolf Trap kick in. The June concerts are far from throwaways either, with one of the violinists we most enjoy listening to, Augustin Hadelich, joining the NSO for a concert with conductor Jakub Hrusa (June 6 to 8), where he will play Dvořák's violin concerto. Mezzo-soprano Nadezda Serdyuk joins for a performance of Prokofiev's score for the film Alexander Nevsky.

Other NSO concerts feature contemporary pieces we really want to hear. Principal cellist David Hardy is the soloist for Dutilleux's Tout un monde lointain, with guest conductor Matthew Hall also leading pieces by Ravel and Vaughan Williams (June 13 to 15). Jean-Yves Thibaudet will give just one performance of James MacMillan's third piano concerto ("The Mysteries of Light") in a program also feeaturing Lutoslawski's Concerto for Orchestra (June 20), conducted by Krzysztof Urbanski.

Hear musicians who would like to be the orchesra players of tomorrow, at the series of performances offered by the National Orchestral Institute at the University of Maryland (June 6 to 30). Concerts include free programs of chamber music, featuring members of the faculty or students, and Saturday night concerts by the festival orchestra, highlighted by Mahler's gripping sixth symphony.

If you like your Wagner without singing, check out the National Philharmonic's Wagner 200th Anniversary Celebration concert (June 1, 8 pm), in the Music Center at Strathmore.



Pianist Markus Groh
THE REST:
Happily, the concert series at the National Gallery of Art continues through the month of June, headed up by a concert from the local ensemble Inscape Chamber Orchestra (June 2, 6:30 pm). Tickets: FREE.

Washington Performing Arts Society concludes its season with a recital by pianist Markus Groh (June 1, 2 pm) in the Kennedy Center Terrace Theater.

The Kennedy Center is once again hosting its Ballet Across America week (June 4 to 9), which will feature performances by a selection of talented regional ballet companies from around the United States, in the Kennedy Center Opera House.

The Washington National Opera continues its American Opera Initiative with two performances of Approaching Ali, a new opera by D. J. Sparr (June 8 and 9), in the Kennedy Center Terrace Theater.

15.5.13

Debussy's 'Jeux', 100 Years Later


Tamara Karsavina (first young lady), Vaslav Nijinsky (young man), and Ludmilla Schollar (second young lady) in Jeux, 1913
As you have doubtless heard by now, we are coming up on the 100th anniversary of the first performance of Stravinsky's Rite of Spring. The groundwork of that infamously riotous premiere was laid by the much less notorious debut of a ballet that was in many ways more revolutionary. Diaghilev's Ballets Russes premiered Vaslav Nijinsky's choreography of the short ballet Jeux at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées on May 15, 1913, at which Pierre Monteux was also the conductor of Debussy's startling score. It would be the last orchestral score that Debussy completed before his death in 1918, and many writers have commented on its originality and daring, not least Pierre Boulez, who saw in it a foreshadowing of later developments in serialism.

As Vaslav Nijinsky recounted in some detail in his diary, Diaghilev's original idea for the ballet was a scenario about a homosexual encounter involving three men. In recognition of the difficulty such a story would have posed, even for the audience of the Ballets Russes, Nijinsky altered the story instead to an erotic meeting of a young man, danced by Nijinsky himself (at one point, to underscore the ambiguity of the situation, he planned to dance the role en pointe in women's ballet shoes), and two young women. To emphasize the playful nature of these events -- the title means "Play" or "Games" -- the action unfolded during a tennis match on a dusk-darkened court.

Somewhat incredibly, we have reviewed the piece live only once in the history of Ionarts, at a concert by the San Francisco Symphony in 2006. The orchestration of Jeux is among Debussy's most vivid, with glistening string divisi and knotted winds -- the whole-tone chord clusters in the prelude, which return more than once in the score, are one of many unforgettable mottos. Myriam Chimènes, who edited the score of Jeux for the Debussy Edition Critique, wrote about the timbres in the score at length for an article in Debussy Studies. She quotes Debussy writing to Andre Caplet about the score: "How was I able to forget the troubles of this world and write music which is almost cheerful, and alive with quaint gestures?" He also described the sort of orchestration he was looking for (he completed the piano score first, as was his usual practice): "I'm thinking of that orchestral color which seems to be lit from behind, of which there are such wonderful examples in Parsifal."


available at Amazon
Debussy, Jeux (inter alia), Orchestre National de Lyon, J. Märkl
(Naxos, 2008)
Debussy uses the brass -- 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, and tuba -- sparingly, at big climaxes or with mutes. The woodwind section gets more work, especially at the big climaxes, often the only points where the full complement plays (2 piccolos, 2 flutes, 3 oboes, English horn, 3 clarinets, bass clarinet, and 3 bassoons). There is even a part for (presumably contrabass) sarrusophone, which does not come in until well into the score (p. 69, after rehearsal 47) and is now mostly played, I think, on contrabassoon. The percussion (timpani, triangle, tambourine, xylophone, and cymbals) is often combined evocatively with the sounds of celesta and two harps.

Many recordings of Jeux have been in my ears, and I like many of them, including Boulez (Cleveland Orchestra, DG), Maazel (Vienna Philharmonic, RCA), the languorous Charles Dutoit (Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal, Decca), and the slightly nervous Christian Thielemann (Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, live in 2002). My favorite at the moment, however, is a recent recording by Jun Märkl and the Orchestre National de Lyon, in the first volume of their complete recording of Debussy's orchestral works. The sound is beautifully detailed and captures a vividly nuanced reading, with all of Debussy's many tempo changes -- one every two bars, as one wag once jokingly put it -- given a fluidity like few others. While some hastier performances can come in under 19 and even under 18 minutes, Märkl's luxurious pacing extends out to 19:25, while still keeping the "dance" episodes -- playful evocations of the waltz and other forms -- energized.

Jeux is thought to be the first ballet ever danced in contemporary dress, with the costumes by Léon Bakst based on early 20th-century tennis outfits. You can watch an attempted reconstruction of Nijinsky's choreography, via the invaluable YouTube: Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3. I had hopes for a production of the ballet this year for the anniversary, but it has not happened yet -- the Washington Ballet's last performance of Jeux was over 20 years ago. For further reading, Richard Buckle's Nijinsky: A Life of Genius and Madness brings together some newspaper pieces from around the time of the premiere, including reviews and an interesting interview that Nijinsky gave to Gil Blas about the piece. In a chapter ("L'Adorable Arabesque") in her book Mallarmé and Debussy: Unheard Music, Unseen Text, Elizabeth McCombie has written a sophisticated comparison of Debussy's score for Jeux to Stéphane Mallarmé's disruptive poem Un coup de dés, in which the poet claimed he was after something like the effect of words given timing like "music heard in concert."

14.5.13

Martina Filjak @ Phillips



Charles T. Downey, At Phillips, pianist Martina Filjak offers unexpected interpretations of familiar works
Washington Post, May 14, 2013

available at Amazon
Soler, Keyboard Sonatas 1-15, M. Filjak
(Naxos, 2011)
Martina Filjak offered some surprises during her recital Sunday afternoon at the Phillips Collection. The Croatian-born pianist gave sometimes unexpected interpretations of familiar works, paired with pieces that were just unexpected. She also played with the una corda pedal halfway down most of the time, enough to keep the hammers striking all three strings but shifting their position just slightly. The goal was to force this often hard-edged instrument into a different realm of sound, and it worked.

Filjak opened with a Mozart sonata (B-flat major, K. 333), one of his sunniest and most welcoming, and she set the first and third movements at an easy-paced tempo that sounded happy, not manic. [...]
[Continue reading]
Martina Filjak, piano
Music by Mozart, Schumann, Scriabin, Prokofiev
Phillips Collection

13.5.13

Farewell to David Finckel

Emerson Quartet:
available at Amazon
Haydn, String Quartets


available at Amazon
Bartók, String Quartets
David Finckel has left the Emerson Quartet, with whom he has performed as cellist since 1979. The group gave their last performance with Finckel on Saturday evening, the conclusion of their Smithsonian Associates concert series at the National Museum of Natural History. As Finckel explained in brief remarks before the second half, the Emersons have played more concerts at the Smithsonian than any other venue, likely performing at one point or another every quartet they have ever learned. He also saluted one faithful listener, Carl Girshman, who has heard the Emersons some two hundred times. So it was fitting that the group marked the end of this chapter here in Washington.

That the next chapter has opened is a reassuring thought, for if we have had some complaints about their sound in the last few years -- including very minor blemishes of intonation and a tendency toward stridency of tone, heard again here -- the Emerson Quartet is an American institution. They opened this time with a Haydn quartet (D major, op. 20/4), one that the group has not yet recorded. While their Haydn would not be one of my first choices, the Emersons gave the accents of the first movement a crunchy bite, with some rushing over fast bits accounting for occasional ensemble issues, and playful metric ambiguity in the slender third Menuetto. The second movement was moving, not too gloomy and played without their accustomed zing in the tone, with a variation that featured Finckel nicely in a solo. They also had fun with the finale, its funny false starts and squawking motifs.

The Emerson's recording of the six Bartók quartets is not among my favorites either, but their take on this composer has improved over the years. This time they returned to the third quartet, and it was just as sharp and unified as when they performed it in 2008: the buzzes of the night music section, the ethereal serenade, the sighing glissandi, the folksy trills of the second movement, the lush and perfectly tuned dissonances of the third, the thrilling and ultra-fast precision of the finale. One might wonder how Finckel's successor, Paul Watkins, could possibly fit into this music, so lived in over so many years. It will take time, but it is possible, as violist Geraldine Walther showed when she joined the Takács Quartet.


Other Reviews:

Philip Kennicott, With a new member, Emerson String Quartet is still masterful (Washington Post, May 13)
It was ingenious to end the Finckel era with Schubert's glorious C major quintet (D. 956), a piece that allowed Finckel and Watkins to be seated next to each other, in identical chairs on the same platform, playing the twin cello parts. The piece opens with the first cello (Finckel) alone, with the second (Watkins) waiting in the wings in silence. Thinking about this performance last week, I looked forward most to the first movement's B theme, where the two cellos begin together on a high G, then gradually split to sing that gorgeous melody in thirds. It was indeed the high point of the entire concert, a bittersweet moment that you know cannot be sustained -- both Finckel and Watkins as cellists in the Emerson Quartet -- so soft and seeming stretched out, although there is no tempo change marked in the score, the other three instruments receding into the background, as if to savor it. Indeed, Schubert seems to underscore the ephemeral beauty of the moment, switching the theme into the viola and first cello at the parallel point in the recapitulation. The sense of benediction extended into the opening section of the Adagio, a wonder of stasis that lifts the listener heavenward, with the three inner instruments in suspended harmonies, the first violin trading thoughts with the pizzicato second cello (Watkins), an angelic contemplation then disturbed by the more urgent howl of the middle section and never quite regained. The scherzo and especially the trio seemed deflated by comparison to what came before it, alternately furious and lushly soft, followed by an Allegretto finale a little too amped up in tempo, but with another memorable two-cello passage, a last moment for the other three instruments to say good-bye before the drive to a thrilling conclusion, capped by elegant turns of phrase. To a huge ovation, Finckel took a couple of bows and then disappeared.

The Smithsonian Associates will continue to host the Emerson Quartet's series at the National Museum of Natural History next season.

12.5.13

In Brief: Call Mom Edition

Here is your regular Sunday selection of links to online audio, online video, and other good things in Blogville and Beyond. (After clicking to an audio or video stream, press the "Play" button to start the broadcast.)


  • From last month, John Eliot Gardiner leads a performance of Bach's B Minor Mass, with English Baroque Soloists and the Monteverdi Choir at Royal Albert Hall. [Österreichischer Rundfunk]

  • In case you missed it, listen to the La Scala production of Verdi's Nabucco with Leo Nucci and Liudmyla Monastyrska, recorded in February. [Österreichischer Rundfunk]

  • From the Cité de la Musique, a recital by Quatuor Meta4 featuring four pieces by Kaija Saariaho (including Serenatas, from 2012, and Mirage, from 2008) and the Voces intimae quartet by Sibelius. [France Musique]

  • The excellent Vienna Piano Trio performs music by Alfredo Casella, Busoni, Respighi, and Wolf-Ferrari in the auditorium of the Musée d'Orsay last month. [France Musique]

  • Simon Rattle leads the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra in excerpts of Ligeti's Le Grand Macabre (with soprano Barbara Hannigan) and Schumann's second symphony, plus music of Sibelius (Luonnotar) and Haydn, in a concert recorded last November. [Österreichischer Rundfunk]

  • Verdi's Don Carlo, recorded at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées last month (stream actually not available until May 13), with Gianandrea Noseda conducting the forces of the Teatro Regio in Turin, starring Stefano Secco, Barbara Frittoli, Ludovic Tézier, and Ildar Abdrazakov. [France Musique]

  • Have a listen to a song recital (music by Poulenc, Ravel, Obradors, others) by soprano Patricia Petibon and pianist Susan Manoff, recorded last month at the Wiener Konzerthaus. [Österreichischer Rundfunk]

  • To celebrate the Detroit Symphony Orchestra's triumph at Carnegie Hall, watch them perform Ligeti's Lontano, Chopin's second piano concerto (with Rafał Blechacz), and Holst's Planets, conducted by John Storgårds and recorded earlier this month. [Medici.tv]

  • From Ambronay, a concert of Baroque music by Monteverdi, Frescobaldi, Krieger, and others performed by the ensemble Sopra il Basso. [France Musique]

  • Yutaka Sado leads the Tonkünstler-Orchester Niederösterreich in Bernstein's second symphony ("Age of Anxiety") with soloist Marc-André Hamelin, who also plays his own Variations on a Theme of Paganini, plus Shostakovich's fifth symphony, in a concert recorded in Vienna in March. [Österreichischer Rundfunk]

  • Peter Oundjian conducts the Choeur de Radio France and Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France in music by Kristoph Maratka (the French premiere of Vábení) and Smetana's Ma Vlast. [France Musique]

  • Listen to the Vienna Symphony, conducted by Ingo Metzmacher last month, perform Bruckner's F minor Mass and Arthur Honegger's third symphony ("Liturgique"). [Österreichischer Rundfunk]

  • From the Utrecht Chamber Music Festival, pianists Roland Pontinen and Itamar Golan and friends perform pieces by Clara Schumann, Brahms, and Hindemith. [France Musique]

  • Neeme Järvi conducts the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande in Geneva, with music by Dvořák plus Mozart's bassoon concerto. [Österreichischer Rundfunk]

  • Cellist Yan Levionnois, violinist Guillaume Chilemme, and violist Marie Chilemme perform music by Mozart, Jonathan Harvey (Three Sketches, 1989), and Robert Schumann, at the Deauville Festival. [France Musique]

  • Also from the Deauville Festival, the Ferdinand Ries chamber transcription of Beethoven's third symphony, plus Elgar's op. 84 Quintet, performed by violinist Amaury Coeytaux and friends. [France Musique]

  • From the Klangraum Waidhofen last month, a recital by pianist Valentina Lisitka with music by Liszt, Beethoven, and Rachmaninoff. [Österreichischer Rundfunk]

  • Musicians from the Orchestre National de France perform music by Heitor Villa-Lobos, plus pieces by Luciano Gallet and Camargo Guarnieri. [France Musique]

  • A concert by the Orchestre National de Bordeaux-Aquitaine last month, with Alain Altinoglu conducting music by Debussy, Dukas, and Stravinsky (Firebird, 1919 version). [France Musique]

  • Ruggiero Leoncavallo also composed an opera on La Bohème, recorded in 1981 by the Munich Radio Orchestra and Bavarian Radio Symphony Chorus, starring Bernd Weikl and Lucia Popp. [Österreichischer Rundfunk]

  • Here is a recent performance of Bartók's Duos for two violins, with Agnès Pyka and Jan Talich, recorded by Radio France. [France Musique]