THE SCOOP | Pianist Anton Kuerti Awarded Order of Ontario
By Michael Vincent on January 14, 2016
Concert pianist and composer Anton Kuerti to be awarded 2016 Order of Ontario on Jan 20, 2016.
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By Michael Vincent on January 14, 2016
Concert pianist and composer Anton Kuerti to be awarded 2016 Order of Ontario on Jan 20, 2016.
(Continue reading)By Joseph So on January 14, 2016
Debuts and reappointments highlight COC 2016-17 season featuring 6 operas: Norma, Ariodante, The Magic Flute, Götterdämmerung, Louis Riel, and Tosca.
(Continue reading)By Ludwig Van on January 13, 2016
David Bowie accurately predicts the future of music in interview with Jeremy Paxman from 2000.
(Continue reading)By Joseph So on January 12, 2016
The Talisker Players sample some of the great favourites from the American songbook with soprano Virginia Hatfield and baritone James Levesque.
(Continue reading)By Ludwig Van on January 11, 2016
"Ask The Professor" will appear on Musical Toronto once a month and will be a fun and intriguing look into the inner world of classical music by those who both listen to it and make it.
(Continue reading)By Ludwig Van on January 11, 2016
David Bowie died yesterday, but his influence was felt everywhere. In the spirit of David Bowie, we give you Toronto-based DJ Skratch Bastid's tribute to the legend.
(Continue reading)By Joseph So on January 11, 2016
Musical Toronto’s weekly Critic’s Picks are a fully curated list of some of the best concerts happening now through the end of the week.
(Continue reading)By Paul E. Robinson on January 9, 2016
Deutsche grammophon releases debut solo album from Seong-Jin Cho, winner of the 17th International Chopin Piano Competition.
(Continue reading)By Arthur Kaptainis on January 8, 2016
The Day the Earth Stood Still. The Bride of Frankenstein. The Thing From Another World. All memorable films for many reasons, including the use of the theremin, the electromagnetic-field-generating apparatus invented in 1920 by Léon Theremin and unfairly associated with science fiction (or, in the case of The Lost Weekend, total drunkenness) since approximately the middle of the 20th century. But this distinctive instrument – the only one that entails no physical contact with the performer – has its concert-hall champions, among whom we may count Alexander Rapoport, whose Sonata for Theremin and Piano will receive its Canadian premiere Monday evening at that west-end clearing house of musical innovation, Gallery 345.
(Continue reading)By Ludwig Van on January 7, 2016
Composer Samuel Andreyev answers 17 questions, which includes the three composers that he never want to hear again. (If you are a fan of Wagner, you might want to close your eyes)
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