Review: Simone Young conducts Richard Strauss (Sydney Symphony Orchestra)
One for the ages as Simone Young and the SSO track Richard Strauss’s musical journey.
One for the ages as Simone Young and the SSO track Richard Strauss’s musical journey.
Spanning Generations X to Z, this Bridge proves too flimsy to carry us all the way across.
Shenyang Conservatory of Music showcase of largely patriotic but musically powerful programming.
Killing off a beloved fictional character is not as easy as it seems in this delightful, nostalgia-fuelled dramedy by Melanie Tait.
The Sydney Fringe Festival gets off to a cracking start with a sleek, elegant work celebrating bodies, light and space.
Double delight as two international sensations – conductor Dmitry Matvienko and violinist Aiko Suwanai – make their Sydney debuts.
An audience well and truly transfigured by a night at the Opera House.
Filled with pinch-me moments, this is opera of and for the people – with one of the finest Abigailles you’re likely to hear.
Wagner and Debussy made shipshape and a major new contribution to Australia’s choral and symphonic repertoire from Paul Stanhope.
A dazzling production brings the fantasy of Mozart’s Magic Flute into the present day.
A queer clown show with bite takes aim at Sydney’s millennial rich, their bathroom renos and their brats.
This staging of a story said to have predicted so much about the world today lacks topical spark and specificity.
Benjamin Appl shines in a program calculated to please lovers of Schumann, French Impressionism and Art Song.