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Front Page > Entertainment > Reviews > Music Reviews |
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Born to be a fiddler - Review By ANNE NEVILLE - 3/4/2007 Natalie MacMaster is home in Lakefield, Ont., on a break from a tour that started Feb. 11 and will go until the end of March. While there, she's working on a PBS special to be released in the fall and enjoying home life with husband Donnell Leahy and nearly 15-month-old Mary Frances Rose. |
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Listening Post - - 3/4/2007 Rock Ron Franklin, "City Lights" (Memphis International). It came from Memphis, this gorgeous, understated gem of a record, made by a guy you've probably never heard of for reasons that have nothing to do with fame, publicity, ambition. |
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Corigliano recasts Dylan's spell - Review By HERMAN TROTTER - 3/4/2007 This is a big weekend for the Buffalo Philharmonic, with two concerts featuring the regional premiere of John Corigliano's "Mr. Tambourine Man: Seven Poems of Bob Dylan," followed by a Monday recording to be released on the prestigious Naxos label. |
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Lang breaks out in soul-stirring show - Review By JEFF MIERS - 3/3/2007 NIAGARA FALLS - Occasionally in this line of work, you happen upon an artist you thought you were familiar with, thought you had pretty much figured out. |
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Quartet worthy of upper echelon - Review By HERMAN TROTTER - 2/26/2007 We are living in an age when the music world arguably offers listeners more superb string quartets than at any time in this critic's memory. And based on Sunday's performances of Beethoven's Quartet in A, Op. 18 No. 5 and Quartet in B-Flat, Op. 130, I'm ready to rank the Alexander String Quartet in the top echelon. |
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Listening Post - - 2/25/2007 Rock Keller Williams, "Dream" (Sci Fidelity). On the concert stage, Keller Williams is a one-man band, employing loops, samples, guitar, bass and percussion instruments in service of an eclectic mix of folk, rock and funk elements. |
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Musical treat ends with show stopper - Review By MARY KUNZ GOLDMAN - 2/24/2007 This weekend, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra has struck a unique balance, welcoming both a wet-behind-the-ears newcomer and a troupe of seasoned pros. |
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