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Lucier changed the way we think about sound through monumental works like I Am Sitting in a Room and Music on a Long Thin Wire.
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Stephen Sondheim has died at 91. Pop Culture Happy Hour's Linda Holmes looks back on her favorite Sondheim tunes.
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Drummer Jimmy Cobb questioned, a poetic Jazz Passenger and goodbye to bassist Charles Flores.
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Nicola Benedetti bears foolishness gracefully, orchestral woes in Minnesota and perhaps the greatest Tumblr concept ever: from this past week, all the classical news that's fit to link.
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The iconic American classical pianist who first rocketed to fame at the Tchaikovsky Competition in 1958 has announced his advanced illness.
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The young Berklee-trained violinist dedicates his new album to the late legend Stephane Grappelli.
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To mark the sesquicentennial of the great French composer, a French piano virtuoso spins his favorite Debussy recordings.
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The Atlanta Symphony struggles, a one-handed pianist graduates and the music of John Cage continues.
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The jazz pianist and longtime host of NPR's Piano Jazz tells her story in a new documentary full of archival footage, family photos and interviews.
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A panel of experts takes the pulse of opera today and discuss its possibilities for the future.
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He wrote music for The Sting, A Chorus Line and The Way We Were, and won a Tony, Oscars, Grammys and Emmys.
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Remembering a legendary American violinist who turned to solo repertoire while performing and broadcasting during World War II. He was 94.