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	<title>Observer &#187; Mozart is 250, Shostakovich 100— And Joe Volpe Says Goodbye</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Mozart is 250, Shostakovich 100— And Joe Volpe Says Goodbye</title>
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		<title>Mozart is 250, Shostakovich 100— And Joe Volpe Says Goodbye</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2006/03/mozart-is-250-shostakovich-100-and-joe-volpe-says-goodbye/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Mar 2006 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2006/03/mozart-is-250-shostakovich-100-and-joe-volpe-says-goodbye/</link>
			<dc:creator>Charles Michener</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/030606_article_spring_michener.jpg?w=241&h=300" />The classical-music world loves nothing more than a great composer&rsquo;s anniversary. This year, the honors go to Mozart (his 250th) and Shostakovich, who&rsquo;d be turning 100 had he survived his tormenters in the former Soviet Union. </p>
<p>In the yearlong burble of Mozart performances, nothing is likely to outshine the strobe-lit pianism of Mitsuko Uchida in an all-Mozart recital at Carnegie Hall on May 11. The Russian birthday boy is being celebrated in more explosive fashion. Valery Gergiev is heading to Avery Fisher Hall to kick off a cycle of all 15 of Shostakovich&rsquo;s brooding, bombastic symphonies. The Kirov Orchestra plays the first two concerts (March 12 and 13); the Rotterdam Philharmonic steps in for the other two (April 9 and 10). On April 27 at Alice Tully Hall, the Emerson String Quartet launches a complete cycle of Shostakovich&rsquo;s 15 quartets in the first of five concerts that will chart music&rsquo;s most harrowing journey into the self. </p>
<p>Preceding the Shostakovich wallow is a lush fanfare by the Russian National Orchestra, conducted by Vladimir Jurowski, in three concerts at Avery Fisher (March 5-8) devoted mostly to Tchaikovsky. And on March 6, the Metropolitan Opera unveils a new production of the same composer&rsquo;s <i>Mazeppa</i>, one of the few operas whose title character is a traitorous villain. Mr. Gergiev conducts an all-star cast of Mariinsky stalwarts; the sets, by George Tsypin (who designed the Met&rsquo;s spectacular <i>War and Peace</i> and <i>The Magic Flute</i>), may get the biggest hand of the night.</p>
<p>Things are more buoyant over at Carnegie Hall, where, on March 18, the German baritone Thomas Quasthoff gives velvet voice to Schubert&rsquo;s <i>Die Sch&ouml;ne M&uuml;llerin</i>. The following night in Zankel Hall, the pianist Richard Goode, the tenor Matthew Polenzani and the mezzo-soprano Tamara Mumford offer a Schubertiade interrupted by the ghostly appearance of Leos Jan&aacute;cek&rsquo;s <i>The Diary of One Who Disappeared</i>.</p>
<p>March also brings the tough-minded German maestro Christoph von Dohn&aacute;nyi to the New York Philharmonic in two programs of uncommon depth. The first (March 2-7) makes Elliott Carter&rsquo;s dizzy <i>Allegro Scorrevole</i> the warmup act for Schumann&rsquo;s more spaciously ordered Symphony No. 4 and Brahms&rsquo; Violin Concerto (with Frank Peter Zimmermann). The second program segues from Schubert&rsquo;s sublime Symphony No. 8 (<i>Unfinished</i>) to Bart&oacute;k&rsquo;s little shop of horrors, <i>Bluebeard&rsquo;s Castle</i>, with Matthias Goerne as the bloody duke and Anne Sofie von Otter as his overly curious groupie (March 9-11). </p>
<p>Women gain the upper hand over war-crazed men in Mark Adamo&rsquo;s new operatic setting of Aristophanes&rsquo; <i>Lysistrata</i>, which is having its local premiere at New York City Opera on March 21. (Has anyone suggested a sexual boycott as a way out of Iraq?) </p>
<p>The Met is giving retiring general manager Joseph Volpe a fizzy sendoff with the last new production of his 16-year tenure&mdash;a staging by Otto Schenk of Donizetti&rsquo;s comic masterpiece <i>Don Pasquale</i>, which opens on March 31. The fetching young lovers are sung by the fetching young superstars, soprano Anna Netrebko and tenor Juan Diego Fl&oacute;rez.</p>
<p>At Easter, Bach&rsquo;s two great Passions, the St. John and the St. Matthew, get widely different treatments&mdash;the former by the choir of men and boys at St. Thomas Church on Fifth Avenue, with a stellar group of early music soloists (April 4); the latter, at the shabby-chic Harvey Theater of the Brooklyn Academy of Music in Jonathan Miller&rsquo;s celebrated, street-smart staging (6 performances, beginning April 8). </p>
<p>St. Ignatius Loyola&rsquo;s Easter basket is well stocked with Arvo P&auml;rt&rsquo;s Stabat Mater, Handel&rsquo;s Organ Concerto in G minor, and Bach&rsquo;s cantata <i>Ich will den Kreuzstab gerne tragen</i> (April 5). Riverside Church hosts a gala performance of Mahler&rsquo;s Symphony No. 2 (<i>The Resurrection</i>) by the Estonian maestro Neeme J&auml;rvi, and an all-star team of players from the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, and the Detroit and New Jersey Symphonies (April 11). </p>
<p>The biggest Easter bonanza&mdash;the Met&rsquo;s production of Wagner&rsquo;s <i>Parsifal</i>&mdash;shows up after the fact on May 12, with a tremendous cast including Ben Heppner, Thomas Hampson, Ren&eacute; Pape and the blazing German singing actress Waltraud Meier as Kundry. As usual, maestro James Levine is likely to put the audience&mdash;and himself&mdash;into a trance.</p>
<p>Will the incomparable mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt Lieberson&mdash;who&rsquo;s cancelled most of her recent appearances because of back problems&mdash;be up to singing Mahler&rsquo;s R&uuml;ckert Lieder with Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony (Carnegie Hall, April 20) and <i>The World in Flower</i>, a new vocal and orchestral extravaganza written for her and the New York Philharmonic by her ardent husband, Peter Lieberson (Avery Fisher, May 25-27)? Fans of the most potent voice since Callas are holding their breath.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/030606_article_spring_michener.jpg?w=241&h=300" />The classical-music world loves nothing more than a great composer&rsquo;s anniversary. This year, the honors go to Mozart (his 250th) and Shostakovich, who&rsquo;d be turning 100 had he survived his tormenters in the former Soviet Union. </p>
<p>In the yearlong burble of Mozart performances, nothing is likely to outshine the strobe-lit pianism of Mitsuko Uchida in an all-Mozart recital at Carnegie Hall on May 11. The Russian birthday boy is being celebrated in more explosive fashion. Valery Gergiev is heading to Avery Fisher Hall to kick off a cycle of all 15 of Shostakovich&rsquo;s brooding, bombastic symphonies. The Kirov Orchestra plays the first two concerts (March 12 and 13); the Rotterdam Philharmonic steps in for the other two (April 9 and 10). On April 27 at Alice Tully Hall, the Emerson String Quartet launches a complete cycle of Shostakovich&rsquo;s 15 quartets in the first of five concerts that will chart music&rsquo;s most harrowing journey into the self. </p>
<p>Preceding the Shostakovich wallow is a lush fanfare by the Russian National Orchestra, conducted by Vladimir Jurowski, in three concerts at Avery Fisher (March 5-8) devoted mostly to Tchaikovsky. And on March 6, the Metropolitan Opera unveils a new production of the same composer&rsquo;s <i>Mazeppa</i>, one of the few operas whose title character is a traitorous villain. Mr. Gergiev conducts an all-star cast of Mariinsky stalwarts; the sets, by George Tsypin (who designed the Met&rsquo;s spectacular <i>War and Peace</i> and <i>The Magic Flute</i>), may get the biggest hand of the night.</p>
<p>Things are more buoyant over at Carnegie Hall, where, on March 18, the German baritone Thomas Quasthoff gives velvet voice to Schubert&rsquo;s <i>Die Sch&ouml;ne M&uuml;llerin</i>. The following night in Zankel Hall, the pianist Richard Goode, the tenor Matthew Polenzani and the mezzo-soprano Tamara Mumford offer a Schubertiade interrupted by the ghostly appearance of Leos Jan&aacute;cek&rsquo;s <i>The Diary of One Who Disappeared</i>.</p>
<p>March also brings the tough-minded German maestro Christoph von Dohn&aacute;nyi to the New York Philharmonic in two programs of uncommon depth. The first (March 2-7) makes Elliott Carter&rsquo;s dizzy <i>Allegro Scorrevole</i> the warmup act for Schumann&rsquo;s more spaciously ordered Symphony No. 4 and Brahms&rsquo; Violin Concerto (with Frank Peter Zimmermann). The second program segues from Schubert&rsquo;s sublime Symphony No. 8 (<i>Unfinished</i>) to Bart&oacute;k&rsquo;s little shop of horrors, <i>Bluebeard&rsquo;s Castle</i>, with Matthias Goerne as the bloody duke and Anne Sofie von Otter as his overly curious groupie (March 9-11). </p>
<p>Women gain the upper hand over war-crazed men in Mark Adamo&rsquo;s new operatic setting of Aristophanes&rsquo; <i>Lysistrata</i>, which is having its local premiere at New York City Opera on March 21. (Has anyone suggested a sexual boycott as a way out of Iraq?) </p>
<p>The Met is giving retiring general manager Joseph Volpe a fizzy sendoff with the last new production of his 16-year tenure&mdash;a staging by Otto Schenk of Donizetti&rsquo;s comic masterpiece <i>Don Pasquale</i>, which opens on March 31. The fetching young lovers are sung by the fetching young superstars, soprano Anna Netrebko and tenor Juan Diego Fl&oacute;rez.</p>
<p>At Easter, Bach&rsquo;s two great Passions, the St. John and the St. Matthew, get widely different treatments&mdash;the former by the choir of men and boys at St. Thomas Church on Fifth Avenue, with a stellar group of early music soloists (April 4); the latter, at the shabby-chic Harvey Theater of the Brooklyn Academy of Music in Jonathan Miller&rsquo;s celebrated, street-smart staging (6 performances, beginning April 8). </p>
<p>St. Ignatius Loyola&rsquo;s Easter basket is well stocked with Arvo P&auml;rt&rsquo;s Stabat Mater, Handel&rsquo;s Organ Concerto in G minor, and Bach&rsquo;s cantata <i>Ich will den Kreuzstab gerne tragen</i> (April 5). Riverside Church hosts a gala performance of Mahler&rsquo;s Symphony No. 2 (<i>The Resurrection</i>) by the Estonian maestro Neeme J&auml;rvi, and an all-star team of players from the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, and the Detroit and New Jersey Symphonies (April 11). </p>
<p>The biggest Easter bonanza&mdash;the Met&rsquo;s production of Wagner&rsquo;s <i>Parsifal</i>&mdash;shows up after the fact on May 12, with a tremendous cast including Ben Heppner, Thomas Hampson, Ren&eacute; Pape and the blazing German singing actress Waltraud Meier as Kundry. As usual, maestro James Levine is likely to put the audience&mdash;and himself&mdash;into a trance.</p>
<p>Will the incomparable mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt Lieberson&mdash;who&rsquo;s cancelled most of her recent appearances because of back problems&mdash;be up to singing Mahler&rsquo;s R&uuml;ckert Lieder with Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony (Carnegie Hall, April 20) and <i>The World in Flower</i>, a new vocal and orchestral extravaganza written for her and the New York Philharmonic by her ardent husband, Peter Lieberson (Avery Fisher, May 25-27)? Fans of the most potent voice since Callas are holding their breath.</p>
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