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| | Arts Calendar / September 11 / Concerts |
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19:00 | Bach, Vivaldi, Liszt, Albinoni |
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17:00 | Ensemble of Old Music "Pfeyffer" |
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Ensemble of old music "Pfeyffer" performs music of the western Europe of XII-XVI centuries. Arkhangelskoye Estate |
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19:00 | Ensemble of Soloists "Hermitage" |
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Ensemble of soloists "Hermitage" performs original and arranged compositions for saxophone with a chamber ensemble. Alexey Utkin (oboe) as a soloist and conductor. Ostankino Estate Theater |
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Russian National Orchestra performs Gliere's Concert for voice and orchestra; Berlioz’ "Fantasy Symphony". Nikolaj Znaider (Israel, Denmark) conducts. Soloist - Laura Claycomb (soprano, USA). Tchaikovsky Concert Hall |
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Based in Toronto, this ambient doom/metal/electronic duo was the brainchild (and originally the solo project) of Aidan Baker. Already a prolific musician who had released a number of works with labels worldwide - including a vast catalogue of CD-R only releases - Baker used Nadja to explore the darker aspects of his musical soul. Taking on vocalist and bass player Leah Buckareff allowed the expansion of Nadja's sound, as well as the ability to play live. Established in 2003, Nadja's early releases followed the pattern already established by Baker, that is to say a lot of CD-R limited releases, but by 2005, the duo was ready for official release, and Alien8 released that year's "Truth Becomes Death". More releases followed, including EPs and collaborative efforts, and in 2007 Alien8 and Nadja released the well-received "Touched". The band also built a following by opening shows for such post-metal luminaries as Ocean and Isis. Aktovy Zal |
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Mozart-Quartet: Alexey Lundin (violin), Irina Pavlikhina (violin), Anton Kulapov (viola), Vyacheslav Marinuk (violoncello) perform Schumann, Franck. Moscow Conservatoire Rachmaninov Zal |
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Sum 41 hit worldwide radar in 1996 after tiny Ajax, Ontario, proved unable to fully contain the foursome's blathering mixture of punk-pop riffing, hip-hop poses, and toilet-bowl humor. Led by guitarist/vocalist Deryck Whibley, who looked like a mash-up of the Prodigy's Keith Flint and cartoon land's Calvin, the band also included guitarist/vocalist Dave Baksh, bassist Cone McCaslin, and drummer Steve Jocz. Wooed by the boys' goofy antics and incendiary live show (and excited about the prospect of promoting their very own blink-182), Island put Sum 41 on the payroll in 1999. "The Half Hour of Power" EP followed, and "Warped Tour" dates got the word out. They returned in 2000 with the fun-filled full-length "All Killer No Filler", and the singles "In Too Deep" and "Fat Lip" became staples of both modern rock radio and Total Request Live. In 2010, Sum 41 released their fifth album "Screaming Bloody Murder". Read more |
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