THE MUSICAL HERITAGE REVIEW
"Recordings serve other purposes than to make available the creations of geniuses. They may, for example, provide insights into the past such as have been available to no other generation in all of human history."
--David M. Greene, founder, The Musical Heritage Review
America's most widely circulated classical music and jazz magazine in the 20th century, with over 500,000 monthly readers, The Musical Heritage Review's articles, essays and reviews are being revived so you can continue, in the words of the Review's founder, "Exploring Music".
NEW FROM THE MUSICAL HERITAGE REVIEW
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Resurrecting America's Colonial Music
David M. GreeneReaders of musical journalism will be aware that it is filled with a constant wailing and lamenting about how the contemporary American composer is ignored by opera companies, orchestras, soloists,...
Resurrecting America's Colonial Music
David M. GreeneReaders of musical journalism will be aware that it is filled with a constant wailing and lamenting about how the contemporary American composer is ignored by opera companies, orchestras, soloists,...
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A Symphony Born of Rivalry
David M. GreeneWith this record, Kurt Masur and the Leipzig Cloth-Hall Band complete their traversal of Schumann's mature orchestral works, and return the first symphony to the place where it was born,...
A Symphony Born of Rivalry
David M. GreeneWith this record, Kurt Masur and the Leipzig Cloth-Hall Band complete their traversal of Schumann's mature orchestral works, and return the first symphony to the place where it was born,...
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Daring and Remarkable - PETER MAXWELL DAVIES, E...
Paul KreshBefore he went off to live in the Orkney Islands off the north coast of Scotland, where the austere air and the salt of the sea seem to have penetrated...
Daring and Remarkable - PETER MAXWELL DAVIES, E...
Paul KreshBefore he went off to live in the Orkney Islands off the north coast of Scotland, where the austere air and the salt of the sea seem to have penetrated...