Features

Jonathan Bibayan - June 19, 2012

Many composers have a flair for dying in unusual and creative ways, which only adds to their mythic status. Here are some of the best musical tales from the crypt.

Janos Gereben - June 15, 2012

SFCV critic Janos Gereben picks 10 events for the summer, just as summer festivals are springing up and other seasons are in full bloom. 

Mark MacNamara - June 12, 2012

It’s a tale for our times, though not an uplifting one. In the end, no one would or could do what was necessary to save a local professional orchestra.

Janos Gereben - June 12, 2012

As Orchestras Implode, Infant New Millennium Tunes Up

Co-founder and second fiddle Dagmar Dolatschko Photos by Bruce Robinson
Janos Gereben - June 5, 2012

Stanford Consecrates Bing Hall With Auditorium

Midori is featured in Stanford Photo by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders
Midori is featu
Georgia Rowe - June 5, 2012

John Adams’ opera has outlasted its critics and finally makes it to San Francisco, thanks to its original commissioner, David Gockley.

Peter Dobrin - June 4, 2012

As the Philadelphia Orchestra counts pennies, can it count on remaining a top-tier orchestra?

Anna Carol Dudley - June 1, 2012

Soprano Judith Nelson, one of the world’s most famous singers of Baroque music as the early music revival began, died peacefully May 28, at the close of a 12-year battle with Alzheimer’s disease.