Boston Baroque Presents Mozart & the Levins, Married Pianist Duo
Jordan Hall at New England Conservatory (30 Gainsborough St. Boston, MA 02115)
- Full Price:
- $28.00 - $42.00
- Our Price:
- $15.00 - $22.00*
* Additional fees apply.
All offers for Mozart & the Levins have expired.
The last date listed for Mozart & the Levins was Saturday March 3, 2012 / 8:00pm.
Currently at Jordan Hall at New England Conservatory:
Discover Russian Classical Treasures With Glory! by Rachmaninoff Festival Choir of America
- Full Price:
- $45.00
- Our Price:
- $22.50
The Rachmaninoff Russian Music Festival's extravagant season finale concert features performances by a 100-voice choir, renowned pianist Vassily Primakov, acclaimed soprano Maria Lyudko, and counter-tenor Andrey Nemzer, a winner in this year's Metropolitan Opera National Council competition. The Rachmaninoff Festival Choir of America joins with Kovcheg, an all-male ensemble from St. Petersburg, and Elegia, a mixed chorus from Moscow, for a performance of rarely performed sacred, secular and operatic works by Russian masters such as Berezovsky (Do Not Reject Me in My Old Age), Tchaikovsky, Gretchaninoff, Glinka and, of course, multiple works by Rachmaninoff. Learn More
3 Goldstar Member Reviews
Boston is indeed blessed with the world-class talent of Professor Levin and his wife, Ja-Fei. Individually, their talent is extraordinary, but the blend of the two and the interplay between them was electric.Written on Mar 05 2012
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Hearing the couple play on period instruments was an eye-opening experience as was the smaller size Boston Baroque orchestra. If only two-piano works could be heard more frequentlyWritten on Mar 05 2012
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More Information About Mozart & the Levins
Website
Quotes & Highlights
- “No one alive knows more about Mozart than Levin.” --Boston Globe
About the Ticket Supplier: Boston Baroque
Three-time Grammy nominee Boston Baroque, the first permanent Baroque orchestra established in North America, is now widely regarded as "one of the world's premier period-instrument bands" (Fanfare). Founded in 1973 by Martin Pearlman, Boston Baroque presents an annual subscription concert series in Greater Boston and reaches an international audience with its critically acclaimed recordings on Telarc.
Boston Baroque's many career milestones include the American premiere of Rameau's Zoroastre; a Mozart opera series including Marriage of Figaro, Così fan tutte, and the American period-instrument premieres of Mozart's Don Giovanni and The Magic Flute; and a revelatory exploration of the Beethoven symphonies on period instruments. In 1998-99, the ensemble gave the modern premiere of The Philosopher's Stone, a singspiel newly discovered to include music by Mozart and to shed fresh light on his canon.
Three Boston Baroque recordings have been Grammy finalists: Handel's Messiah (1992); Monteverdi's Vespers of 1610 (1998); and Bach's Mass in B Minor (2000).
Boston Baroque is the resident professional ensemble for Boston University's Historical Performance Program, where it is helping to train the next generation of period-instrument performers.
