Julia Carabatsos
Staff Reporter
Author Archive
Camerata addresses climate change through music

In the Church of the Redeemer, the singers in the Yale Camerata performed before a towering screen that added a multimedia experience to the Sunday […]

Philharmonia to premiere original Bruckner

“Bruckner’s music is unlike anything else,” said Peter Oundjian, principal conductor of the Yale School of Music’s Philharmonia. “After conducting anything else, I feel like […]

Choral Artists to Perform Josquin, Poulenc

The Yale Choral Artists, an ensemble featuring preeminent singers from across America, will perform on Saturday in New Haven’s Christ Church. Led by Yale School […]

Yale Jazz Ensemble to begin season

The Yale Jazz Ensemble will hold its season-opener tonight in Sprague Hall’s Morse Recital Hall, performing music by Charles Mingus, Duke Ellington, Maria Schneider, Phil […]

Schola Cantorum performs Bach

Five hundred years ago, in 1517, Martin Luther made public his theses condemning corruption in the Catholic Church. The numerous consequences of the Reformation extended […]

Philharmonia to perform Strauss, feature violin soloist

In 2011, violinist Laura Park MUS ’18 won a competition that brought her to the stage of Severance Hall in Cleveland to perform the Sibelius […]

Rolston quartet takes “deep dive” into Beethoven

Playing in a string quartet means taking “a deep dive” into all the music the Rolston String Quartet studies and performs, said Jeffrey Dyrda, a […]

Opening Night with the YSO

Is orchestra more athletic than football? According to Yale Symphony Orchestra co-president and clarinettist Jacob Sweet ’18, while football features a “52-man roster,” the YSO is “truly a 70 or 80 man roster, and everyone is playing at the same time.” This Saturday, September 23rd, the YSO tackles music of Bernstein, Smetana, Beethoven and Brahms in its 52nd season opener.

Music at Center Stage

Our music created a passageway not only across the language barrier, but also into Russian culture, separate from politics — the part of Russia not featured in today’s news.

Noah Stevens-Stein