Monday, December 22, 2025

The Best of 2025


Kang Wang as the title character
The Monkey King
San Francisco Opera
Photo: Cory Weaver, courtesy of SFO
 

SFCV published the writers' collective opinions of the best performances of the year. The Bay Area list is here. My five choices were these:

  • Esa-Pekka Salonen's Mahler 2
  • Poiesis Quartet at Noe Music
  • The Monkey King at San Francisco Opera
  • Pivot Festival, Carla Kiehlstedt's 26 Little Deaths
  • Tartuffe, Pocket Opera
It was a tough call. Here's the rest of my long list:

  • La bohème at SFO; a seriously great run, beautifully directed, with two terrific casts.
  • MTT 80, a deeply touching celebration of the man.
  • Parsifal at SFO
  • Rigoletto at SFO
  • Bluebeard's Castle at Opera San José
  • Turn of the Screw at SFCM, better staged and conducted than what I saw at Santa Fe over the summer.
  • John Adams third piano concerto, After the Fall, at SFS. I couldn't include the concert on my short list because the second half was (&)%$)_@_ Carmina Burana.
  • Dalia Stasevska at SFS, in the Thorvaldsdottir cello concerto and RWV's Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis.
  • Cabrillo Festival, Becoming
  • Hello, Star at OP. Just a perfect 45 minutes of opera begging for a larger orchestra. A wonderful libretto, beautiful music, great direction on a tiny stage.
  • Donald Runnicles and Irene Roberts at SFS
As you can see, I named four of the last six operas at SFO as among the best things I saw; Dead Man Walking was also superb. SFO had a stupendous year and in fact has been on a roll since the centennial season. Hats off to Matthew Shilvock and his team for this long string of artistic successes, which has also included a fair number of sellouts.

As for the flip side, I am going to pass on flagging concerts I found disappointing or wrong-headed. There's not much doubt that the worst event of the year was Esa-Pekka Salonen's departure from San Francisco Symphony after just five years as music director. He reinvigorated the orchestra's programming, led many great concerts, hired many terrific musicians, and thanks to the short-sightedness of the board and management, which couldn't figure out how to fund his ambitions for the future, he is gone.

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