All Magazine articles – Page 74
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Review
Timothy Ridout: Vaughan Williams, Martinů, Hindemith, Britten
Blossoming viola soloist gracefully takes on the mantle of Tertis
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Review
Jack Liebeck: Schoenberg, Brahms
Exuberance, focus and ravishing tone in two highly contrasting concertos
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Review
Raphael Wallfisch: Sacheverell Coke
Exploring neglected British chamber music from around World War II
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Review
Gringolts Quartet, Meta4: Mendelssohn, Enescu
Compelling performances and glorious sonority from two ensembles
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Review
Maria Milstein, Mathieu van Bellen: Górecki, Prokofiev, Ysaÿe
Young Dutch violinists create a very lively duo recital
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Review
Mirijam Contzen: Clement (Beethoven’s World)
Persuasive exploration of Beethoven’s influence on his contemporaries
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Review
Brodsky Quartet: Beethoven
A masterpiece of quartet playing in a masterpiece of quartet writing
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Review
Untold: The Ciderhouse Rebellion
Improvising folk fiddler and accordion player create spontaneous magic
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Review
Sheku Kanneh-Mason: Elgar
Young cellist steps up to the mark in this most iconic of concertos
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Review
Vilde Frang: Paganini, Schubert, Liszt, Ernst
Seductive phrasing and scintillating technique in an inspired recital
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Review
Diana Tishchenko: Strangers in Paradise
Prize-winning violinist demonstrates her mettle in an eloquent recital
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Premium ❘ Feature
Lutherie in the Vogtland: Stars of the East
The Vogtland in eastern Germany produced some of the country’s least known and most fascinating instrument makers.Rudolf Hopfner and Monika Lustig use CT scans to lift the lid on their unusual construction methods, and show why they should be more widely studied
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Premium ❘ Feature
Pöpel and Kurzendörffer: The Mists of Time Demystified
Just three Vogtland instruments exist from before 1700. All violas, they were made by two of the founders of the region’s first violin making guild.Klaus Martius explores what we know about the mysterious Johann Adam Pöpel and Johann Adam Kurzendörffer