Music for Passover and Easter, including Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater, Mendelssohn’s setting of Psalm 42 and Handel’s oratorio “Israel in Egypt.”
April 2
11 a.m.-2 p.m. EDT
1500-1800 UTC/GMT
WDCE, University of Richmond
90.1 FM
www.wdce.org
Haydn: Symphony No. 26 in D minor (“Lamentation”)
The English Concert/Trevor Pinnock
(DG Archiv)

Pergolesi: Stabat Mater
Emma Kirkby, soprano
James Bowman, countertenor
Academy of Ancient Music/Christopher Hogwood
(Decca)
Mendelssohn: Psalm 42
Eiddwen Harhhy, soprano
La Chapelle Royale
Collegium Vocale Ghent
Ensemble Orchestral de Paris/
Philippe Herreweghe
(Harmonia Mundi France)
Handel: “Israel in Egypt”
Ruth Holton, Elisabeth Friday & Donna Deam, sopranos

Ashley Stafford, Michael Chance, Patrick Collin & Jonathan Peter Kenny, altos
Nicolas Robinson, Philip Salmon, Paul Tindall & Andrew Tusa, tenors
Julian Clarkson & Christopher Purves, basses
Monteverdi Choir
English Baroque Soloists/John Eliot Gardiner
(Philips)
Penderecki: “Polish Requiem” – Lacrimosa
Jadwiga Gadulanka, soprano
Royal Stockholm Philharmonic/
Krzysztof Penderecki
(Chandos)
From casting and direction to scenery and costumes, this production is almost faultless.

Concerto No. 2 in C minor with the University of Richmond Symphony Orchestra, Alexander Kordzaia conducting, on April 8 at UR’s Modlin Arts Center. While discussing the concerto and the young pianist’s musical activities and aspirations, we’ll sample Rachmaninoff’s Rachmaninoff: two of his 1919 Ampico piano rolls in digital realizations and his celebrated 1929 recording of the Second Piano Concerto with Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra.

Arriaga: Quartet No. 3
personality of the early national period or the Civil War. Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, Edgar Allan Poe, Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis live on, and not just in tourist brochures.
Symphony, obtaining one of the most successful performances this orchestra has given in recent memory.
Nemtsov, a leading critic of the Vladimir Putin regime, Russia stands “on the edge of moral collapse . . . [a] society starved of pure air, pumped full of fear and jingoism, where good intentions have been driven into a dead-end.”
Tito Muñoz, music director of the Phoenix Symphony, and pianist Stanislav Khristenko for a program of Mozart, Schumann and Beethoven, March 7 at Richmond CenterStage. . . . The symphony is engaged for most of the month as the pit orchestra for Virginia Opera’s production of Verdi’s “La Traviata,” coming to Richmond CenterStage on March 27 and 29 after runs at the Harrison Opera House in Norfolk (March 13, 15 and 17) and George Mason University’s Center for the Arts in Fairfax (March 21-22). . . . Richard Spece conducts Richmond’s new period-instruments orchestra, Mannheim Rocket, in its inaugural concert, playing symphonies by Mozart and Beethoven on March 13 at historic Monumental Church. . . . eighth blackbird, the new-music sextet in residence at the
University of Richmond, is joined by the Sleeping Giants composers’ collective in “HandEye,” March 16 at UR’s Modlin Arts Center. . . . Virginia Commonwealth University stages a Flamenco Festival of music, dance and song, featuring flamenco guitarists Torcuato Zamora and Miguelito and other performers, March 20-22 at VCU’s Singleton Arts Center. . . . Six Virginia organists perform in the fifth annual Bach Birthday Marathon presented by the Richmond chapter of the American Guild of Organists, March 22 at St. Benedict Catholic Church. . . . Two Richmond Symphony principals, violinist Daisuke Yamamoto and cellist Neal Cary, join pianist Joanne Kong in “Vive la France,” a program of French chamber music, March 23 at the Modlin Center.
Virginia Tech’s Center for the Arts in Blacksburg. . . . Jesús López-Cobos conducts the National Symphony Orchestra in music of Spain and Portugal, March 5-7, part of the Kennedy Center’s month-long “Iberian Suite” festival of music, dance and visual art. . . . Pianist Lang Lang plays Bach, Tchaikovsky and Chopin, March 7 at the Kennedy Center. . . .
Hamelin joins Les Violons du Roy in a program of Rameau, Haydn and Mozart, March 17 at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. . . . The Emerson String Quartet plays Beethoven, Ravel and Purcell, March 26 at the Kennedy Center. . . . Cellist Matt Haimovitz brings his