There is a stereotype about the classical music form known as minimalism, and it is best summed up in a joke about one of the genre’s most famous composers: Knock, knock. Who’s there? Knock, knock.
There’s something timeless about a stadium anthem inspired by Bruckner’s Fifth Symphony emanating from the speakers at the soccer match in Vienna’s Ernst Happel Stadium. The famous riff, which plays ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Jakub Hrusa and the Bamberg Symphony have released a new recording of them all. By J.S. Marcus The Austrian composer Anton Bruckner died in 1896, but ...
For nearly five decades, Daniel Barenboim has been making a case for the symphonies of Anton Bruckner. Tonight at Carnegie Hall, the conductor begins a complete cycle of Bruckner's nine numbered ...
Simon Rattle, with his new German orchestra, brought Thomas Adès’s Aquifer to vivid life in its UK premiere, and held the audience rapt in a lucid and light-on-its-feet reading of Bruckner’s fourth ...
Take four trombones, an organ and a choir performing works by Anton Bruckner, and you have the potential for some pretty grand music. Chamber Music on the Fox will present “Majestic Bruckner” at 7:30 ...
Musically, the Christmas season begins in earnest Sunday at St. Martin’s Lutheran Church, where the Arundel Vocal Arts Society will perform lovely choral works and traditional carols. The first half ...
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