All stories by David Rohde on BroadwayStars

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Pianist Alon Goldstein at the Odeon Chamber Music Series by David Rohde

Franz Schubert’s Piano Sonata No. 19 in C minor is a sprawling, at times even rambling composition that takes a full half hour to spin out. Not even one of the world’s greatest living pi…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 05:25PM
Saturday, April 18, 2015

Pianist Martin Kasik with the Embassy Series at the Czech Embassy by David Rohde

Czech pianist Martin Kasik has an important historic connection with Washington despite relatively infrequent visits here. He was a 1999 winner of the Young Concert Artists series, which lau…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 01:21AM
Sunday, April 12, 2015

Bach’s ‘St. John Passion’ with the National Philharmonic at Strathmore by David Rohde

Johann Sebastian Bach wasn’t just fulfilling a professional responsibility when he wrote religious music. A devout Lutheran, Bach meant what he wrote and sought musical texts and texture t…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 09:52PM
Thursday, April 9, 2015

A Q&A with Mezzo-Soprano Magdalena Wór on Her Training in Washington and ReturnThis Weekend to Strathmore by David Rohde

Mezzo-soprano Magdalena Wór pretty much creates an unforgettable impression everywhere she performs. Her strikingly rich voice – it’s been called “plush,” “chocolatey” and other…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 08:16PM
Wednesday, April 8, 2015

The Philadelphia Orchestra with Washington Performing Arts at the Kennedy Center by David Rohde

Subtext abounded as the Philadelphia Orchestra arrived at The Kennedy Center Tuesday night. In Washington, rising politicians are “mentioned for president.” In classical music, rising co…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 11:47AM
Tuesday, March 24, 2015

‘Haydn and Ravel’ with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra at Strathmore by David Rohde

You can’t get a much pithier title of a composition than Maurice Ravel’s La Valse. You also can’t get a much more misleading one, either, even if the composer fully meant the irony of …

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 01:32AM
Friday, March 20, 2015

Mahler’s Ninth with the National Symphony Orchestra at The Kennedy Center by David Rohde

If you choose to let it, Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 9 can scare you to death. Or you can let its vast scope and its ethereal beginning and ending that sandwiches raucous and even sarcast…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 02:35PM
Monday, March 16, 2015

Pianist András Schiff at Washington Performing Arts at Strathmore by David Rohde

One of the most charming moments I’ve seen at a concert in years occurred yesterday at The Music Center at Strathmore. András Schiff, one of the world’s leading pianists, brought a prog…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 02:10PM
Saturday, March 14, 2015

‘Mozart’s Great Mass’ with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra at Strathmore by David Rohde

If I told you that the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra may be the most dynamic classical music organization in our region, you’d probably expect me to prove it with a report on a daring progr…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 02:27AM
Monday, March 2, 2015

Mahler’s Fifth Symphony with the University of Maryland Symphony Orchestra at The Clarice by David Rohde

Not just any conservatory or university school of music can mount a concert featuring Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 5. It may not have familiar tunes, but Mahler’s Fifth is a landmark com…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 10:31AM
Tuesday, February 17, 2015

‘Parade in Concert’ at Avery Fisher Hall in New York by David Rohde

Jason Robert Brown’s Parade is a gut-punch of a musical about the 1913 murder trial of an Atlanta Jewish man, his unjust conviction, his subsequent semi-exoneration to “only” life in p…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 01:39PM
Saturday, February 14, 2015

Cellist Amit Peled Recreates 100-year-old concert at the Peabody Institute by David Rohde

Picture this: A leading classical performer finds a program from a century ago played by a legend on his instrument, sets the date to recreate the concert for the exact 100th anniversary of …

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 01:46PM
Tuesday, February 10, 2015

The National Philharmonic’s 10th Anniversary Concert at The Music Center at Strathmore by David Rohde

Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 may be based on the poem “Ode to Joy,” but that doesn’t mean the epic symphony holds a monopoly on joyous music. If anything, the pieces accompanying Beeth…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 05:22PM
Tuesday, February 3, 2015

The State Symphony Orchestra of Mexico at the George Mason Center for the Arts by David Rohde

World orchestras are at their most interesting when they bring a blend of their native musical language with the European tradition that defines “classical music.” With the help of two s…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 01:26PM
Friday, January 30, 2015

National Symphony Orchestra: Fantasy & Fate: Tchaikovsky Masterworks: Christoph Eschenbach, Conductor: Symphony No. 4 / Arabella Steinbacher, Viol by David Rohde

It’s almost a cliché to sit smugly in a 21st century theater or concert hall enjoying a work that some original critic destroyed to his everlasting infamy. And audiences at this week’s…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 02:09PM
Sunday, January 4, 2015

Beethoven’s Ninth with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra at Strathmore by David Rohde

For sheer drama in classical music this year, it will be hard to top the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s knife’s-edge performance of Ludwig van Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 on Saturday ni…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 07:50PM
Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Watch Out, Washington: Here Comes Beethoven’s Ninth by David Rohde

Everybody knows about Walter Cronkite and his impact on television news. Fewer people remember or know about Cronkite’s great rival on NBC during the 1960s, The Huntley-Brinkley Report. Pa…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 02:23PM
Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Standout CDs of Three Rising Classical Artists: Einav Yarden, Yevgeny Kutik, and Danielle Talamantes, by David Rohde

Debut recordings by emerging classical performers face enormous challenges. There’s the issue of finding unique material or a unique voice after so much music has been recorded so many tim…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 04:05PM
Monday, December 15, 2014

The Washington Metropolitan Philharmonic at the Church of the Epiphany by David Rohde

The sheer number of mid-rank orchestras in the Washington area guarantees a wide variety of musical approaches to holiday concerts. But the prize for the most boundary-expanding holiday prog…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 12:43PM
Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Pianist Einav Yarden at The Phillips Collection by David Rohde

A packed house at the Phillips Collection could have been forgiven if they thought that pianist Einav Yarden had magically switched out Steinway grand pianos between numbers. The Israeli pia…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 02:42AM
Monday, November 24, 2014

The Ariel Quartet at the Israeli Embassy by David Rohde

How much do you re-interpret music that was written 100 or 200 years ago? This eternal question has an unequivocal answer in the hands of a young ensemble like The Ariel Quartet: Just do it.…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 03:54PM

‘Bernstein and Beethoven’ with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra at Strathmore by David Rohde

Which pieces to put with which on an orchestra program is a subject of endless debate. Does it really matter if concerts have an overall theme? It does if they have as meaningful a connectio…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 01:17PM
Friday, November 21, 2014

DC Area Soprano Danielle Talamantes On Her CD Signing on Sunday in Vienna, VA, the Met, Concert Music, and the Opera Singer’s Life by David Rohde

Rising local soprano Danielle Talamantes talks about the Met, concert music, and the opera singer’s life Politicians and lobbyists running to catch the Acela at Union Station in D.C. or Pe…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 05:46PM
Monday, November 17, 2014

Violinist Yevgeny Kutik at Peoples’ Symphony Concerts in NYC by David Rohde

Challenging or dissonant music can be a slog for both the classical music performer and the listener. If you’re at all fearful to see live concerts because of the reputation of 20th-centur…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 05:41PM
Sunday, November 16, 2014

The Czech Philharmonic at George Mason University’s Center for the Arts by David Rohde

Sometimes there’s reason to doubt why a symphony orchestra needs all those violins. Many of the labor disputes that are running around the country’s major professional ensembles, includi…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 10:28AM
Monday, November 10, 2014

Pianist Thomas Pandolfi’s ‘One Singular Night’ at the Todd Performing Arts Center by David Rohde

Standing alone on the stage of the Eastern Shore home of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, pianist Thomas Pandolfi joked that no orchestra was magically going to materialize before the audie…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 09:26PM

The Ying Quartet at the Kreeger Museum by David Rohde

No type of ensemble works harder these days than string quartets to make classical music “cool” and relevant. From hip, funky websites to innovative performances in unusual spaces, strin…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 08:24PM
Thursday, November 6, 2014

The Gewandhaus Orchestra of Leipzig at Washington Performing Arts by David Rohde

You have a right to be skeptical when a symphony orchestra claims to have a unique sound. Down through the centuries most composers of symphonic music have given specific directions about wh…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 03:37PM
Sunday, November 2, 2014

National Philharmonic: ‘Mozart’s Requiem’ at The Music Center at Strathmore by David Rohde

Why do people willingly get dressed up and head out in the dark to hear funeral music when no one has died? Three words: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. There have been dozens or hundreds of other …

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 03:01PM
Thursday, October 30, 2014

An Interview With Washington, DC Piano Sensation Thomas Pandolfi About Classical and Popular Music and the Artist’s Life by David Rohde

If Thomas Pandolfi hasn’t done all that a pianist can do to present an exceptionally broad range of music to an engaged public, he certainly seems determined to. The D.C. native, one of th…

SOURCE: DC Metro Theater Arts at 03:47AM

All that Chat

2023-2024 BROADWAY SEASON
May 30, 2023: Grey House - Lyceum Theatre
Jun 26, 2023: Just For Us - Hudson Theatre
Jul 24, 2023: The Cottage - Hayes Theater
Nov 16, 2023: Spamalot - St. James Theatre
Dec 18, 2023: Appropriate - Hayes Theater
Mar 07, 2024: Doubt - Todd Haimes Theatre
Apr 14, 2024: Lempicka - Longacre Theatre
Apr 17, 2024: The Wiz - Marquis Theatre
Apr 18, 2024: Suffs - Music Box Theatre
Apr 25, 2024: Mother Play - Hayes Theater
Jun 10, 2024: The Drama Desk Awards