Norman Lebrecht's Album of the Week - Sibelius Symphonies
/The Minnesota Orchestra’s partnership with the Finnish conductor Osmo Vänskä is a treasure of our times, especially when they play music of the frozen north.
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The Minnesota Orchestra’s partnership with the Finnish conductor Osmo Vänskä is a treasure of our times, especially when they play music of the frozen north.
Read MoreA strong-willed young woman and a visionary young man navigate a 16th-century Germany in chaos in order to find their destiny
Read MoreAn emotionally and physically damaged young woman finds healing by helping some of the most unlucky dogs on Earth in Shannon Kopp's touching new book
Read MoreThey're not great (in fact they're often mild and unoriginal), but the concertos of Muzio Clementi and Mozart's son, Frances Xaver, are nonetheless worth your time.
Read MoreThe legendary life of the great Frederick Barbarossa is grounded in facts and records in a deeply impressive new biography
Read MoreA new single-volume biography captures the oversized life of legendary composer and pianist Franz Liszt
Read MoreThere used to be a truth, universally acknowledged across the record industry, that you could put out unfamiliar music with a famous artist or popular music with an unheralded performer but never attempt what Donald Rumsfeld might have called the unknown unknowns.
Read MoreHow do you manage to have religion without scripture? As a fascinating new book demonstrates, inn this as in so many other seemingly impossible paradoxes, the ancient Romans found a way.
Read MoreA brilliant new book explores the alternatives to brute force the Nazi regime often employed to get its way
Read MoreThey may grate in other instances, but period instruments are well suited to Mendelssohn's Songs without Words, as this new recording demonstrates.
Read MoreA big new history of the German Army during World War II takes a complex and multifaceted look at the men who fought for the Reich
Read MoreA new dual biography of poet and translator accompanies a new illustrated edition of the famous Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam
Read MoreTchaikovsky's violin concerto towers over all other Russian efforts in the genre, but these two by Glazunov and Khachaturian deserve a wider audience.
Read MoreLong before Peter the Great and Catherine the Great, Russian thinkers and writers were haltingly, passionately fashioning their own peculiar brand of Enlightment
Read MoreThis year in our annual Summer Reading feature, our writers recommend favorite books that take us on journeys - through time, around the world, or just out of ourselves.
Read MoreOnce upon a time, Westerns were a staple of American fiction. Now they've all but disappeared. Zach Rabiroff asks why cowboys rode off into the sunset.
Read MoreCoyotes have successfully infiltrated almost every niche of the American landscape and folklore. Justin Hickey tours Coyote America by Dan Flores.
Read MoreEver since Mary Shelley wrote her weird masterpiece two centuries ago, it's been impossible to keep a good monster down. In the Shadow of Frankenstein gives readers two dozen pastiches that keep the Creature alive.
Read Morea poem
Read MoreA lovely rural landscape is seen throught urban-trained eyes in Ada Limon's poetry collection Bright Dead Things. David Nilson reviews.
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