by Stephanie Manning

On May 5 at West Shore Unitarian Universalist Church, the trio of local musicians delivered a wonderfully relaxing evening of chamber music by Johannes Brahms and Charles Koechlin. [Read more…]
by Stephanie Manning

On May 5 at West Shore Unitarian Universalist Church, the trio of local musicians delivered a wonderfully relaxing evening of chamber music by Johannes Brahms and Charles Koechlin. [Read more…]
by Daniel Hathaway
Tonight at 7:30, CityMusic Cleveland begins its portable May Orchestra Series at Fairmount Presbyterian Church with a free concert led by Lorenzo Lopez featuring soprano Chabrelle Williams with the CityMusic Community Choir. Gabriel Fauré’s Requiem is the centerpiece, and the program includes William Grant Still’s Danzas de Panama, and Gabriela Lena Frank’s Leyendas: An Andean Walk-Around.
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Apollo’s Fire releases details of ¡HISPANIA!, its 2025 Summer Concerts
Performances include May 27 & 28 send-off concerts for the ensemble’s Puerto Rican tour and Countryside Concerts from June 5-9 with Puerto Rican vocalists Sophia Burgos and David Glazman and Mexican-American flamenco guitarist Jeremías Garcia. Download a press release here.
Carillon bells return from the Netherlands
Friends of the University Circle McGaffin Carillon write that “The McGaffin Carillon Bells have cleared customs (with minimal import tariffs) and are on their way to Cleveland. [Read more…]
by Kevin McLaughlin

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Few pianists today elicit the kind of eager expectation, borne of star-power and reputation, that Evgeny Kissin does the moment he takes the stage. There is a quality to his presence — austere and shy yet fully possessed — that electrifies a listener before a single note sounds. In Mandel Concert Hall at Severance Music Center on Wednesday evening, May 7, Kissin’s program of J.S. Bach, Chopin, and Shostakovich, plus encores, had something to satisfy every fan’s wish.
Bach’s Partita No. 2 in C minor began the evening on low heat, with an understated approach to the Sinfonia‘s long, elegant lines. But it wasn’t until the final Capriccio that the pianist’s rhythmic and technical polish fully enlivened Bach’s polyphony without diminishing its architectural integrity.
by Stephanie Manning

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Composer Allison Loggins-Hull spent the past three years immersing herself in the city of Cleveland as The Cleveland Orchestra’s Daniel R. Lewis Composer Fellow. Drawing on her interactions with residents and community organizations, her valedictory composition, Grit. Grace. Glory., is a sonic celebration of the city she recently called home.
The piece, co-commissioned by the Toronto Symphony, received its world premiere by Franz Welser-Möst and The Cleveland Orchestra on Thursday, May 8, at Severance Music Center. The 22-minute work was the rightful centerpiece of the evening, interposed between symphonies by Mozart and Prokofiev.
by Kevin McLaughlin

The group’s thinning and their positioning in front of the stage due to a lightbulb outage might have bothered a lesser ensemble, but the Escher players carried on with expansive lyricism and technical bravado throughout the evening. [Read more…]
Reviews by Kevin McLaughlin, Daniel Hathaway, & Stephanie Manning

The performances were treated like an art exhibition accompanied by an elaborate, 45-page catalog full of documentation about the composer, whose life and career under the Soviet system left an indelible mark on his music. A timeline that runs along the bottom of the program pages helped put Shostakovich’s compositions in historical context. [Read more…]
by Daniel Hathaway
6:00 pm – Piano Cleveland Live presents Daniela Liebman, joined by fellow pianists and Baldwin Wallace faculty members Anthony and Christine Fuoco in repertoire that runs the gamut from originals to new spins on old favorites at BrewDog Cleveland Outpost.
TODAY’S ALMANAC:
Before lighting the birthday candles for historical figures born on May 14, let’s observe the passing of Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel in 1847 at the too-young age of 43. That Felix Mendelssohn’s sister could hold her own is demonstrated in her piano cycle Das Jahr (played here on a doctoral recital in Montréal by Laurence Manning). [Read more…]
by Daniel Hathaway
At 12:00 Noon Piano Cleveland presents Daniela Liebman in the Ames Family Atrium at the Cleveland Museum of Art, and at the same hour, Tuesdays at the Church of the Covenant hosts organist Mikhail Grazhdanov.
TODAY’S ALMANAC:
Today we celebrate the births of two British musical luminaries who made their debuts on May 13.
In 1842 composer Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan came into the world in London. Sullivan exhibited his musical prowess early on — at the age of eight he composed his first anthem and soon after became a soloist in the boys’ choir of the Chapel Royal. At age 14 the Royal Academy of Music awarded Sullivan the first Mendelssohn Scholarship, allowing him to pursue his musical studies at the Academy as well as at the Leipzig Conservatory. [Read more…]
by Daniel Hathaway

TODAY’S ALMANAC:
by Jarrett Hoffman
A little bit about me: I enjoy long walks on the beach at sunset, and quiet days in classical music history — the kind when you can easily zero in on one or two musicians and give them their proper respect in the daily almanac.
Here’s one way to put May 12 in perspective: if all the important composers who were born on this date decided to celebrate their birthdays at the local Burger King — as we all were once inclined to do — the playpen would be so full of collisions and tears that at some point, each musician would need to be lifted into the air by mom or dad, receive a gentle pat on the back, and be taken home early. [Read more…]
by Daniel Hathaway
Some highlights in a busy weekend (see all events and details in our Concert Listings):
The Cleveland Orchestra continues its unveiling of Allison Loggins-Hull’s Grit. Grace. Glory. (a co-commission, composer pictured) on Friday at 11 am, and Saturday at 8.
A Heights Arts Close Encounters open rehearsal on Friday at 6 pm involves pianist Yaron Kohlberg, violinist Amy Lee, and cellist Dane Johansen, who are preparing Antonìn Dvořák’s Piano Trio No. 4 and Beethoven’s Piano Trio in B-flat for performance on Sunday, May 11 at 3 pm at Heights Theater.
A virtual trip to Italy on Friday at 7:30 will take you to hear Ottorino Respighi’s The Pines of Rome performed by Raphael Jiménez and the Oberlin Orchestra, and Yubo Deng soloing in Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1, plus the premiere of Katharina Mueller’s Elements. It’s free, and will be live streamed from Warner Concert Hall..
Unless you’re a woodwind player, the name of composer Anton Reicha may not ring any bells, and neither might Josef Eybler or Manual Canales. Allow Wit’s Folly to introduce you to three of their string quartets on Saturday at 7 pm at Praxis Fiber Workshop (suggested donation $20).
And on Saturday at 7:30 pm, Christopher Wilkins and the Akron Symphony and Chorus will raise the roof of E.J. Thomas Hall with Giuseppe Verdi’s operatic Requiem. Tickets available online.
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Akron’s Tuesday Musical has announced its 2025-2026 subscription series at E.J. Thomas Hall. [Read more…]