Search
DCist Logo

Mstislav Rostropovich

All Stories

Oct 21, 2007

Classical Music Agenda

This is going to be an excellent week for serious listeners of classical music, with several major events headlining the agenda and some other good concerts on the sidelines. In the spotlight are a piano recital, a visiting orchestra, Russian music, and possibly the greatest opera ever composed. HEADLINES: >> Pianist Murray Perahia had to cancel his 2006 recital for Washington Performing Arts Society, because of renewed pain from a finger injury in the 1990s…

May 18, 2007

Out and About: Weekend Picks

FRIDAY: >> There’s another Hirshhorn AfterHours event planned for tonight, when the museum stays open late for a party, this time featuring DJ Spencer Product in a celebration of the new exhibit Wolfgang Tillmans. $10 in advance, $12 at the door, 8 p.m. to midnight. >> KRS-One is “The Teacher” for a reason — besides being an over-40 MC still preaching against violence, misplaced hatred, and government corruption, he’s also been a crucial influence for…

May 12, 2007

Classical Music Agenda

Be a good son or daughter and call your mother today. Then you can start thinking about what concerts to hear this week. Maybe you can ask your mom to come with you. THE BIG GUNS: >> Joining the National Symphony Orchestra this week is Chinese pianist Lang Lang. He and composer Jennifer Higdon have parted ways about her new piano concerto, which he was supposed to premiere this week. Instead, Lang Lang will play…

Apr 27, 2007

Mstislav Rostropovich, 1927-2007

Washington woke up this morning to the sad news that Mstislav Rostropovich died in Moscow today, after undergoing treatment for cancer since February. The world has lost a giant of music, an enthusiastic, larger than life figure for many of his 80 years among us. Many Washingtonians felt the loss more keenly because of the Russian cellist and conductor’s long relationship with the city, as Music Director of the National Symphony Orchestra from 1977 to…

Feb 07, 2007

Mstislav Rostropovich in the Hospital

Mstislav Rostropovich, the celebrated Russian cellist who led the National Symphony Orchestra from 1977 to 1994, has been admitted to a hospital in Moscow, according to reports this morning. He has been coming back to Washington as Music Director Emeritus ever since he stepped down (most recently reviewed by DCist last April). His condition is called “satisfactory,” and he even received a visit from Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday. In fact, the announcement of the…

Oct 21, 2006

Classical Music Agenda

This is a good week for hearing 20th-century symphonic repertoire, even though the National Symphony Orchestra is on another break. As we approach the first major event of the NSO’s season, the two-week Shostakovich festival in November, we will have the chance Since the NSO Shostakovich festival in November has been cancelled (due to Mstislav Rostropovich’s health problems), this week is our only chance to celebrate the Dmitri Shostakovich centenary some more. MODERN: >> On…

Apr 28, 2006

DCist Goes to the Symphony

Most people now associate the words “classical music” so strongly with the past that it is easy to forget that composers are still writing music for those traditional vehicles of art music — opera, symphony, chamber ensembles. Soprano Dawn Upshaw urges us regularly not to forget this very fact, by lending her radiant voice to so many new compositions. Indeed, she has become the muse of many contemporary composers, the favored midwife at numerous musical…

Apr 23, 2006

Classical Music Agenda

This is your last weekend to take part in Take a Friend to the Symphony Month, the brain child of music blogger Drew McManus at Adaptistration. The big news in classical music this week is that the area’s two leading symphony orchestras are both offering great concerts that feature 20th-century music and even some from the 21st century. We are going to try to review them both for you. MODERN SYMPHONY: >> Former music director…

Jul 30, 2005

Classical Music Agenda

We considered not even posting the Classical Music Agenda this week, given how few concerts there are to hear. (Our concert schedule for the month of August at Ionarts is the shortest it’s ever been.) Still, it would be pathetic for this DCist to shirk work this easy, so we promise to keep it short. Basically, it comes down to one of two instruments, cello or organ, and both are free. So, choose your poison….

 
Terms of Use |WAMU Privacy Notice
WAMU 88.5 | American University RadioMailing Address: PO Box 98101 | Washington, DC 20090-8101
Station Address: 4401 Connecticut Ave, NW | Washington, DC 20008 |
Combined Federal Campaign (CFC): #91855
© 2026 All Rights Reserved.