- Boston Symphony, where there has been drama.
- Cleveland Orchestra, where there has not been drama. The orchestra announced in January, 2024, that Franz Welser-Möst would leave at the end of the 2026-27 season. Three years' notice, similar to MTT's three at SFS.
- SFS, where there has been drama, with Esa-Pekka Salonen deciding to part ways over differences with the board.
- LA Philharmonic, where there has not been drama. Gustavo Dudamel decided to move to the NY Philharmonic in February, 2023, and commences the new position with the 2026-27 season. Well, the return of Esa-Pekka Salonen in a non-music director position could be considered dramatic and could cause some conductors to rule out the appointment, because being music director when one of the best conductors in the world – who is also one of the best composers in the world – is in the office next door could be discouraging.
Iron Tongue of Midnight
Lisa Hirsch's Classical Music Blog.
The iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve. Lovers, to bed; 'tis almost fairy time.
Berce mollement sur ton sein sublime
Ô puissante mer, l’enfant de Dindyme!
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Major Openings
Saturday, March 07, 2026
San Francisco Opera 2027-28
- Die Walküre, Wagner; part of the Ring bring-up
- The Galloping Cure, Missy Mazzonli; SFO co-commission and U.S. premiere
- ???
- ???
- Siegfried, Wagner, single performance as part of the Ring bring-up
- Götterdämmerung, Wagner, single performance as part of the Ring bring-up
- Der Ring des Nibelungen, Wagner, three performances of the four operas
Friday, March 06, 2026
I (Sort of) Called This One
I will say that when Chad Smith got that job [CEO of the Boston Symphony] and Salonen decided to leave SFS, I wondered whether Smith would try to recruit Salonen for the BSO. If he did, it didn't work, but I did notice that Nelsons is now on an annually-renewable contract. Smith can cut him loose any time he has someone in mind as a replacement.
And to a different friend in July, 2024:
I have been wondering whether Boston would make a play for Salonen. They can say good-bye to Nelsons easily, and Smith presumably has a good relationship with Salonen.
Earlier today, in the NY Times (gift link):
Boston Symphony Abruptly Ends Its Music Director’s Contract
The orchestra’s leadership announced on Friday that it and the conductor Andris Nelsons “were not aligned on future vision.”
The Boston Symphony Orchestra abruptly dismissed its music director, Andris Nelsons, on Friday, in a harsh public split between one of the nation’s leading orchestras and the man who has led it for 12 years. The orchestra said that it and Nelsons were “not aligned on future vision.”
His tenure with the Boston Symphony will end in summer 2027, at the end of its Tanglewood season. The announcement — in tone and timing — was startling in a world in which such personnel shifts are typically done delicately and over the course of a few years.
“The decision to not renew his contract was made by the B.S.O.’s board of trustees because, beyond our shared desire to ensure our orchestra continues to perform at the highest levels, the B.S.O. and Andris Nelsons were not aligned on future vision,” the board and Chad Smith, the orchestra’s president and chief executive, said in a letter to patrons. A similar note was sent to members of the orchestra.
- The Boston Musical Intelligencer reports on the story and includes Nelsons' letter to the BSO musicians.
Livermore Valley Opera's Così fan tutte
- Lisa Hirsch, Parterre Box
- Charlise Tiee, Opera Tattler
- Lisa Hirsch, SFCV
Monday, March 02, 2026
Back in 2025....
I published some articles last year that I never wrote about on the blog. It's never too late!
- Three Opera Singers on How They Built Their Careers, SFCV, May, 2025. If you've been attending the opera in the Bay Area for any length of time, you know Alex Boyer, Chung-Wai Soong, and Leandra Ramm, even if you're not sure you do. They've all sung roles of varying sizes with local companies; Soong and Ramm are both active in pro choruses here, including working as extra chorus at SF Opera. Boyer went on a couple of times last year as Brandon Jovanovich's cover at the Met in Jake Heggie's Moby-Dick.
- Walking with Sister Helen, Opera Now, October, 2025. I spoke with Susan Graham, Joyce Di Donato, Jamie Barton, and Patricia Racette, who've all sung Sister Helen Prejean in Jake Heggie's Dead Man Walking, and with Frederica von Stade, who created Mrs. Patrick De Rocher, the mother of the condemned man. It was a great honor to speak with these magnificent singers, all of whom I've admired over a long period.
- Second Acts: Musicians Leaving the Spotlight to Find Something New, SFCV, October, 2025. An article about three classical musicians who are no longer performing, for different reasons. Nicole Cash, former associate principal horn the San Francisco Symphony, became an audiobook narrator after focal dystonia meant she couldn't continue as a horn player. Tenor David Lomelí became a consultant to opera companies around the world after digestive issues affected his singing. Elizabeth Rowe, former principal flute of the Boston Symphony and a magnificent player, became a leadership and executive coach (the circumstances are too complicated to describe briefly).
Musicians leave classical music at different times in their careers and for a wide variety of reasons. It is a very tough and competitive business and it is difficult to get a career going in such a competitive field. If you're curious about this subject, web search will turn up podcasts, personal testimonies, and articles about individuals musicians. Elizabeth Rowe's case is unusual in that she had the kind of position you can stay in for decades (the legendary Doriot Anthony Dwyer held the BSO principal flute chair for 38 years), but various circumstances led her to a career change.
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Better Late Than Never
- Rebecca Wishnia, SF Chronicle and SFCV
- Joshua Kosman, On a Pacific Aisle (link to follow)
- DB at Kalimac's Corner
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Canto Ostinato at Cal Performances
- Lisa Hirsch, SFCV and SF Chronicle
- Joshua Kosman, On a Pacific Aisle. He's got more analysis of what's going on technically in Canto Ostinato. I meant to say something about how very Spanish the work sounded at various points, but, well, intentions.
Friday, February 20, 2026
Cav 'n Pag, Opera San José
- Lisa Hirsch, SFCV
- Joshua Kosman, On a Pacific Aisle
- Eddie Reynolds, Theater Eddys
Monday, February 16, 2026
Museum Mondays
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Davóne Tines and Ruckus: "What is Your Hand in This?"
- Michael Zwiebach, SFCV
- Lisa Hirsch, Parterre Box
- Michael Strickland, SF Civic Center
- Patrick Vaz, The Reverberate Hills
Monday, February 09, 2026
Bicket, Schultz, and Mozart at San Francisco Symphony
- Lisa Hirsch, S.F. Chronicle / SFCV
- Joshua Kosman, On a Pacific Aisle (link to follow)
- Harvey Steinman, Seen and Heard International
- Matthew Travisano, Parterre Box
- Michael Strickland, SF Civic Center
Sunday, February 08, 2026
Suzannah Lessard
Ms. Lessard, her five sisters and their parents lived in a 19th-century farmhouse known as the Red Cottage. It had sloping floors, patched plaster walls and a fraught atmosphere, largely created by her father, who required quiet for his work as a composer, as well as other, more brutal concessions from his daughters.
...
Ms. Lessard’s memoir was decades in the making. It was the book she could not write, and yet felt compelled to write, and the writer’s block she suffered often compromised her other work; for much of the time she was struggling with it, she was a staff writer at The New Yorker.
...
Ms. Lessard had never previously spoken about how her father had visited her in her bedroom when she was a child. Yet on New Year’s Day in 1989, one of her sisters called a meeting of the siblings and, one by one, each sister confided that she, too, had experienced sexual encounters with their father.
Over the years, each had tried to convince herself that the encounters weren’t abuse — that their childhoods had been safe and that their father’s behavior was somehow normal. Their memories, finally voiced, gave Ms. Lessard “a sense of something like the sound barrier breaking,” she wrote, “a psychic reverberation.”
She added: “With it, the world cracked open, and inside was the world.”
...
After the sisters’ revelations, the family entered therapy, but their father claimed not to remember the encounters they described. (The Lessards had divorced decades earlier.) Ms. Lessard said that exposing her father in her book was not an act of revenge but of survival.
Right. He could not remember sexually abusing his six daughters over goodness knows how many years.
When I looked him up, I realized I was slightly acquainted with her father. Suzannah Lessard's composer father John Lessard was on the faculty of SUNY/Stony Brook when I was a student there from 1980 to 1982. Once I knew that, I had no trouble conjuring up an accurate picture of him.
He was by then married to his second wife, Sarah Fuller, a musicologist who was also on the faculty. He was retired from the faculty by the time The Architect of Desire was published, and died seven years later, but you bet I am now wondering about whether and what kind of discussions he might have had about the book and his past with Prof. Fuller, and how she reacted to what he said. They remained married until his death in 2003.
Los Angeles Opera, 2026-27
Thursday, February 05, 2026
Livermore Valley Così fan tutte
Seattle Opera 2026-27
- Salome, Richard Strauss. October 17-31. Brenda Rae (!) in the title role; she is a pretty light soprano, so we'll see how this goes. Chad Shelton as Herod, mezzo-soprano Jennifer Johnson Cano as Herodias, baritone Michael Kupfer-Radecky as Jochanaan, and tenor Joseph Tancredi as Narraboth. Benjamin Manis conducts.
- Jamie Barton in recital, Nov. 21. She is a great singer and a ton of fun.
- Anita Spritzer's gay Apparel, Dec. 11, 13, 19.
- El último sueño de Frida y Diego, Frank. January 16-30. Daniela Mack, Alfredo Daza, Mei Gui Zhang, Jake Ingbar. Production seen at SFO, conducted by Carolyn Kuan. I loved this opera in SF, where I saw a cast that included Mack, Daza, and Ingbar. Zhang will be good as La Catrina.
- Lakmé, Delibes, in concert, March 5 and 7. Aigul Khismatullina, David Portillo, Christian Purcell, Nicholas Newton, Hongni Wu. Daniela Candillari conducts. Not a fan of Portillo, like Purcell and Wu a lot, don't know the others.
- La Bohème, Puccini. May 8 to 23, I didn't much care for this production, by Seattle's general director James Robinson, at Santa Fe last year, but of course it's a great opera. Double cast; not going to list all of the singers. Roberto Kalb, whom I've liked in a couple of operas, conducts.
California Sympnony 2026-27 Season
SIBELIUS, HIGDON, AND BARTÓK – American Connections
Saturday, September 26, 2026 at 7:30pm
Sunday, September 27, 2026 at 4pm
Jean Sibelius: The Oceanides (1914)
Jennifer Higdon: Cello Concerto, Julian Schwarz, cello
Béla Bartók: Concerto for Orchestra (1943)
Sunday, January 24, 2027 at 4pm
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony. No. 31 in D Major (1778)
Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges: Symphony No. 1 in G Major (published 1779)
Franz Joseph Haydn: Symphony No. 85 in B-flat Major (1785)
BEETHOVEN’S SECOND – Cowell, Adams, & Beethoven: Masterful Mavericks
Sunday, March 14, 2027 at 4pm
John Adams: Violin Concerto (1993)
Helen Kim, violin
Ludwig van Beethoven: Symphony No. 2 in D Major (1802)
PINES OF ROME – Orchestral Landscapes
Saturday, May 8, 2027 at 7:30pm
Sunday, May 9, 2027 at 4pm
Paul Novak: World Premiere
Composer-in-Residence
Manuel de Falla: Nights in the Gardens of Spain (1909-15)
Tanya Gabrielian, piano
Manuel Ponce: Chapultepec (1929, rev. 1934)
Ottorino Respighi: Pines of Rome (1924)
(I've heard Pines of Rome three times in the last four years at SFS, and that was at least twice too many. It's good, noisy, fascist fun once a decade. But the rest of the program is definitely worth hearing!)
Wednesday, February 04, 2026
San Francisco Opera, 2026-27
San Francisco Opera announced its 2026-27 season yesterday. One of the operas in the season, Wagner's Das Rheingold, was announced for the season in November, when preliminary Ring casting was announced. Last year's season announcement mentioned Thea Musgrave's Mary, Queen of Scots, for a future season, which has now arrived. I have some personal thoughts that weren't appropriate for my S.F. Chronicle article on the season. Let's go opera by opera.
- Simon Boccanegra, Verdi, opens the season, with Eun Sun Kim conducting and what looks like a terrific cast. Kim conducted Rigoletto, which opened the current season, with nuance and oh so much color; it was just great. Amartuvshin Enkhbat has the ideal voice for the title role and I hope that he'll be strongly directed. I checked out some videos of Eleanora Buratta, making her SFO debut as Maria/Amelia (you know that there are two characters who are known under two names in this opera, right? Be prepared to be confused.), and wow, what a voice. Christian Van Horn is Jacopo Fiesco. I love this opera beyond reason and I'm greatly looking forward to seeing it again, after a fifteen-year gap since I saw it at the Met with Abuser 1 in the title role and Abuser 2 conducting, with King of the Gods James Morris as Fiesco, a performance that leaves me slightly queasy in retrospect.
- Mary, Queen of Scots, Musgrave, opens next, and I'm excited to hear the work and the performers. Heidi Stober has already gotten raves for her assumption of the title role last year at ENO, and you may have spotted me raving about her Seattle Daphne. Thomas Kinch, third-year Adler and Heldentenor, plays the Earl of Bothwell; debuting baritone Thomas Mole is Mary's brother James Stewart. Clelia Cafiero conducts.
- Manon, Massenet. I liked this production a lot when it premiered with Ellie Dehn and Michael Fabiano, and I'm a fan of the new Manon/Chevalier pairing, Amina Edris and Pene Pati. It'll be different and I'm sure good. James Creswell, whom I admire a lot, returns as the Comte Des Grieux; Eun Sun Kim conducts.
- The Marriage of Figaro, Mozart. Sebastian Weigle, whom I've never heard, conducts a cast of singers I haven't heard in these roles before except for Catherine Cook and Maurizio Muraro. Peter Kellner is new to the company; I expect Olivia Smith, Slávka Zamečníková, and Simone McIntosh to be excellent. I didn't love the production in its first bring-up, but we'll see what revival director Shawna Lucey does with it.
- Das Rheingold, Wagner. Eun Sun Kim starts the company's revival of Francesca Zambello's production in the summer of 2027, with, so far, a complete cast turnover. We will get our first local taste of Brian Mulligan's Wotan (though you can see his Walküre Wotan on Medici TV, in concert, conducted by Yannick Nezeh-Seguin, with Tamara Wilson as Brünnhilde), which I expect to be beautifully sung and thoughtful. Kim's three Wagner productions at SFO have all been tremendously conducted, from the first downbeat of Lohengrin to the closing measures of Parsifal. We were lucky to have Donald Runnicles for 17 years and we are incredibly fortunate to have Kim now.
- Tosca, Puccini. Shawna Lucey's production is back, with Clelia Cafiero back, conducting Rachel Willis-Søorensen in her role debut as the Roman diva, Riccardo Massi as Cavaradossi, and Quinn Kelsey as the evil Scarpia.
- Janos Gereben, SFCV
- Parterre Box
- Gabe Meline, KQED
- James Ambroff-Tahan, Examiner
- Opera Tattler
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Daphne at Seattle Opera
Soprano Heidi Stober’s appearances with the company have been reliable sources of joy ever since her 2010 debut in Massenet’s “Werther.” But her performance as Blanche added a new and even deeper level of psychological specificity to her expected vocal brilliance.



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