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The KPAC Blog features classical music news, reviews, and analysis from South Texas and around the world.

Classical Music In 2015: The Year In Review

Osmo Vänskä conducts the Minnesota Orchestra in Havana, Cuba in May 2015.
Yamil Lage
/
AFP/Getty Images
Osmo Vänskä conducts the Minnesota Orchestra in Havana, Cuba in May 2015.

Although 2015 produced arguably fewer big headlines in classical music than its predecessors, there were still surprising stories. The Minnesota Orchestra played Havana, Alan Gilbert announced his departure from the New York Philharmonic and pianist Valentina Lisitsa's politically volatile tweets boiled up a lot of hot water. Here's a look back at some of the notable stories, birthdays, anniversaries, recordings, awards and farewells that made 2015 unique.


January

Mozart In The Jungle: The Amazon series that portrays a fictitious New York orchestra, led by a charismatic Gael García Bernal, ruffled a few classical purists and sparked enough interest to merit a second season.

Remembering pianist Aldo Ciccolini, the great Erik Satie specialist.

Steve Reich's It's Gonna Rain turned 50.

February

New York Philharmonic conductor steps down: On an otherwise calm Friday afternoon, Alan Gilbert shook the classical music world. The Philharmonic music director announced he would leave the orchestra in the summer of 2017. Two questions popped up immediately: Why did he pull the plug? And who will replace him?

March

Farewell, sheet music mecca: Frank Music Company, Manhattan's last standing store dedicated to sheet music, closed its doors. Operating since 1937, the venerable business was a pilgrimage site for many celebrated musicians but ultimately couldn't withstand competition from online retailers.

Boulez at 90: Once a bad boy of modern music who suggested blowing up the world's opera houses, Pierre Boulez transformed himself into an all-purpose conductor while remaining a composer of sensuously radical music.

100 years of Sviatoslav Richter: Veteran critic Steve Wigler assesses one of the greatest pianists by recalling Carnegie Hall concerts.

April

Valentina Lisitsa's social media mayhem: With a series of incendiary political messages on Twitter, the pianist managed to not only divide her fans but get herself fired from an engagement with a leading orchestra, while another pianist was caught in the crossfire.

Assessing the dazzling and controversial sides of the late trumpeter Rolf Smedvig.

Remembering the multifaceted music critic, scholar, librettist, translator and stage director Andrew Porter.

Julia Wolfe wins the music Pulitzer for an oratorio on coal mining. She's the second composer from the Bang on a Can new music collective to earn the prize.

May

Minnesota Orchestra plays Havana: As relations between the U.S. and Cuba begin to normalize, the ensemble is the first major U.S. orchestra to perform on the island since 1999. For the musicians, the trip is more than just musical diplomacy.

June

A new baton in Berlin: The Berlin Philharmonic is often considered the best in the world. So when the musicians of the orchestra choose a new chief conductor, everyone in classical music takes note.

An unsettling end for film score composer James Horner.

Remembering Gunther Schuller, a man who merged classical music and jazz.

Margaret Juntwait, voice of the Metropolitan Opera, goes silent.

Carl Nielsen's oddball symphonies: For the sesquicentennial of the composer's birth, an introduction to his quirky, exuberant music.

Terry Riley at 80: The man credited as a father of minimalism celebrated a big birthday. And his influence reaches well beyond classical music.

Tristan und Isolde at 150: Wagner's epic opera triggered a seismic shift in Western music.

July

Treasuring Vic Firth, the entrepreneurial percussionist.

Celebrating Jon Vickers, a tenor with an electrifying voice.

August

Singing Cold Mountain: Pulitzer Prize winner Jennifer Higdon's first opera was a highly anticipated adaptation of Charles Frazier's best-selling Civil War novel.

Happy 70th, Itzhak Perlman.

September

Abandoning blackface: The Metropolitan Opera, for the first time since 1891, ended its practice of darkening white tenors who sing the title role in Verdi's Shakespearean tragedy, Otello.

Arvo Part turned 80: Five things you need to know about the quiet, devout composer.

October

Happy 60th, Yo-Yo Ma.

Strauss' musical mountain climb: Marking the centennial of An Alpine Symphony with a tour through Richard Strauss' evocative music.

A cartoonist debuts: Multitalented Philadelphia Orchestra trumpeter Jeffrey Curnow begins brightening our Fridays as NPR Music's new classical cartoonist.

November

Hamlet's Ophelia speaks: Hans Abrahamsen wins the Grawemeyer Award for his song cycle let me tell you, a moving mashup of the words allotted to Shakespeare's unhappy character.

December

Remembering Kurt Masur, the man who rebuilt the New York Philharmonic.

Jean Sibelius at 150: For the sesquicentennial of the Finnish composer's birth, Michael Steinberg's introduction to seven evocative symphonies.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Tom Huizenga is a producer for NPR Music. He contributes a wide range of stories about classical music to NPR's news programs and is the classical music reviewer for All Things Considered. He appears regularly on NPR Music podcasts and founded NPR's classical music blog Deceptive Cadence in 2010.