REVIEW: Garrick Ohlsson's Crisp and Luscious Chopin at 92NY

The piano recital is alive and well. 92NY’s Kaufmann Concert Hall — one of the city’s superior stages for solo piano — hosted Garrick Ohlsson, first and only American winner of the Chopin International Piano Competition, in his first all-Chopin concert for New York audiences in more than a decade. Ohlsson delivered a veritable masterclass not only in classical piano performance, but also the fine art of programming.

REVIEW: Denève and Szeps-Znaider Seize Attention at David Geffen Hall

Stéphane Denève, alongside violin soioist Nikolaj Szeps-Znaider, joins the NY Phil for a weighty concert that requires, and rewards, an old-fashioned attention span. The digital organ may merely suffice, acoustically, but when the Philharmonic’s inimitable low brass section are finally allowed to join the festivities, in bombastic, gloriously well-tuned fanfares, the audience is roused to their feet.

REVIEW: Imani Winds Debut at 92NY

Imani Winds has been making a case for the enduring relevance of the woodwind quintet for 27 years. But the twice Grammy-nominated group hadn’t performed at 92NY until now, joined on this occasion by pianist Terrence Wilson, buttressing two French classical works with Latin American music rooted in dance. It was a nicely balanced evening.

REVIEW of The Museum of Broadway

The Museum of Broadway finally opened on the main stem in the guise of an “an experiential, interactive museum,” nestled in the heart of Times Square, neighboring the Lyceum Theatre, one of Broadway’s oldest gems. The museum gives you your money’s worth, whether you’re a teenager making a WICKED-inspired pilgrimage to Oz, or a seasoned subscriber who remembers “when they saw the original production of ___.”