My picks of the year's best recordings and Richmond area performances of classical music, and the picks of my fellow music critics at Style Weekly (including the band that made Hilary Langford want to "run away naked with the gypsies"),
now in print and online at:http://www.styleweekly.com/ME2/Audiences/dirmod.asp?sid=&nm=&type=Publishing&mod=Publications%3A%3AArticle&mid=8F3A7027421841978F18BE895F87F791&tier=4&id=967E6E9F7CC64AA3A68C07EFEE7A7876&AudID=C3A7C1EDE4E54E24AF4637F9AAFFD1B6
And with that, 2008 is a wrap at Letter V. Best wishes for the year to come. Dress warmly if you're going out on New Year's Eve – another one of those 30-degree temperature drops, to the low 20s, is forecast from afternoon to overnight.

Handel’s "Messiah" that the orchestra and Richmond Symphony Chorus have presented in years.
cynical, manipulative dirtball, with the sole exception of the male romantic lead, the love-struck bumpkin Nemorino, who, naturally, is the butt of all the jokes. And when all the highjinks have ensued, everyone lives happily ever after – even Nemorino, who has inherited a pile of money and the bride of his dreams, although we may safely guess that he won’t keep either any longer than she can help.
Barber, the American neoromantic, concluded his "Second Essay for Orchestra" with a clear echo of old English modal hymnody; and Stravinsky, the Russian neoclassicist, filled his "Symphony of Psalms" with resonations from the oldest liturgical chants.