BWW Blog: Why You Should Drop What You're Doing and Listen to Vivaldi's Spring from The Four Seasons
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe. Before I decided to stay home with ...
You’ve probably heard Vivaldi’s “Spring” concerto (“La Primavera” in its original Italian) before. More than likely, you didn’t hear it on the radio or on Spotify or performed live, but you may have ...
Struggling with a task? Need to be mega-brainy? Vivaldi's Spring from The Four Seasons will do it - and science knows. Listening to Vivaldi's Spring from The Four Seasons could have beneficial effects ...
More information: Call (970) 453-5825, or visit http://www.nromusic.com On Wednesday, July 8, Breckenridge’s National Repertory Orchestra and music director Carl ...
CHICAGO (CBS)-- Mother's Day is usually about getting a gift for mom, but this Mother's Day during the COVID-19 pandemic, one baby daughter seems to love a gift that she received from mom. So Young ...
On the third day of spring, the San Antonio Symphony formally welcomed the season with a blossoming rendition of Antonio Vivaldi's “Spring” Concerto. “Summer,” “Autumn” and “Winter” followed, ...
Spring arrived at the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra concerts this weekend — along with summer, autumn and winter — thanks to Antonio Vivaldi’s “Four Seasons” concertos. The programmatic pieces, which ...
Alexi Kenney transforms Vivaldi's "Four Seasons" into a dramatic, deeply physical performance as the San Francisco Symphony ...
I first experienced Vivaldi as a toddler at Yehudi Menuhin's festival in Gstaad, Switzerland, in 1975. One day I heard what I thought was birdsong coming from the stage. It was the opening solo of "La ...
The tree-lined Mall in Central Park was meant for music. Since the Mall’s first bandstand opened in 1862, millions of visitors have spent summer evenings under the elms enjoying a free concert series ...
This piece originally appeared on Pacific Standard. The Mozart Effect—the notion that listening to certain pieces of classical music can boost one’s brainpower—was initially embraced, widely ...
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