Posted on

Research Week Offers Both Virtual and In-person Events This Year

Research Week, the annual showcase of UC Merced’s important explorations into some of the world’s most pressing challenges, kicks off Monday with the Sierra Nevada Research Institute’s symposium on climate.

SNRI researchers are at the forefront of innovative tools, technology and thinking about resilient and sustainable ecosystems, food systems and futures. Everyone is welcome to join the annual SNRI Research Symposium as members discuss new climate research and approaches for ag, energy, infrastructure and the environment.

Research Week runs Monday through Friday and is hosted by the Office of Research and Economic Development, along with the many institutes and centers at UC Merced.

“We are genuinely excited to highlight the incredible research that goes on at UC Merced and to offer faculty, staff, students, and members of the community the chance to learn about each other’s work and intellectual passions,” said interim Vice Chancellor for Research and Economic Development Marjorie Zatz. “I hope everyone will take advantage of the many opportunities during Research Week.”

Like most of the events, the SNRI symposium will be virtual. One of the few-in person offerings is the chance to get out and go for a walk on Tuesday and tour the Merced Vernal Pools and Grassland Reserve. People can learn about the ancient soils, the protected species and the shallow pools that form each year.

Research Week offers many opportunities for people to learn about topics such as intellectual property, biosafety and the culture of lab safety, UC Merced’s research facilities and a variety of subjects faculty members specialize in.

New this year: faculty flash talks. Faculty will offer 15-minute sessions to share current projects for students to be aware of research opportunities for the current academic year, summer or the next academic year.

The Health Sciences Research Institute ’s symposium will feature graduate students and faculty speaking on a broad range of topics, including an introduction to HSRI’s new San Joaquin Valley Center for Community Air Assessment and Injustice Reduction (SJV CC-AIR), for a taste of the broad range of work being conducted by HSRI members.

Topics include “Predicting and Promoting COVID-19 Preventive Behaviors,” “The Effects of Electronic Cigarette Additives on Lung Surfactant Membranes,” “Toward a New Paradigm in Molecular Diagnostics of Infectious Diseases” and “Improving Self-Regulation and Social Support for Diabetes During Emerging Adulthood.”

The week will continue with guest speakers from Yosemite National Park, the U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station and the greater National Park Service discussing research partnerships and opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students. They will discuss with students how to navigate the federal job application process and access amazing lab and field research experiences.

During Grad STORY, participants can hear about the journeys graduate student researchers have been on to get to UC Merced and during their time here and get a chance to ask the students questions.

There will also be a Resource Center for Community Engaged Scholarship Community Reception to celebrate research conducted in collaboration with the community. Those who attend will learn about current research projects and how to get involved in future projects to connect research with community goals and hear from faculty and students about their projects from across the Central Valley that directly involve community members.

To see the whole schedule, register for events and get passcodes for the virtual gatherings, visit the Research Week website.

Posted on

CRITIC’S PICKS | Classical Events You Absolutely Need To See This Week: Feb. 28 – Mar. 6

Classical music and opera events for the week of February 28 to March 6
Classical music and opera events for the week of February 28 to March 6
Classical music and opera events for the week of February 28 to March 6

This is a list of amazing concerts we are attending, wishing we could attend, or thinking about attending between February 28 – March 6, 2022. For more details on what’s happening around Toronto, visit our calendar here.

Toronto Symphony Orchestra | Final Fantasy VII Remake Orchestra World Tour

📅 Tuesday — March 1, 2022, 7:30 p.m. ET (Repeats March 2-3)
📍 LINK
💸 $51+

From the creators of Space Invaders comes an all-new, live orchestra experience that reimagines and reinvents one of the most cherished video game titles of all time. Whom will the hero of the game be? The TSO, of course. If video game music isn’t your thing, wait till Friday for The Princess Bride. | Details

The National Ballet Of Canada | A Streetcar Named Desire

📅 Wednesday — March 2, 2022, 7:30 p.m. ET (Runs through Mar. 6)
📍 LINK
💸 $42+

“Stella-a-a-a-a-!” If you haven’t seen the ballet production of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, it’s a must. This revival production was created in 1983 by John Neumeier, Director and Chief Choreographer of The Hamburg Ballet. Time-tested, we’d argue this is the definitive version. | Details

Music In The Afternoon | Andrew Haji

📅 Thursday — March 3, 2022, 1:30 p.m. ET
📍 LINK
💸 $42+

Opera lovers will know Canadian tenor Andrew Haji as a go-to voice from operatic and concert stages around the globe. With many opera venues yet to re-open, this is an excellent opportunity to see this talent in a more intimate setting. He’ll be singing songs by Franz Liszt, Britten, and Francesco Santoliquido. Pianist Stéphane Mayer accompanies. Note that the Music in the Afternoon series has moved to Grace Church on-the-Hill this season. | Details

Toronto Symphony Orchestra | The Princess Bride

📅 Friday — March 4, 2022, 7:30 p.m. ET (Repeats March 5 matinée + evening)
📍 LINK
💸 $71+

Missing seeing The Princess Bride on the big screen with a live orchestra at Roy Thomson Hall is inconceivable. If you’ve never seen it, or if you were just too darn young to remember it properly, this is the chance to see it exactly as it was meant to be seen — on a big screen, in glorious Technicolor, and with the incredible sounds of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. | Details

Sinfonia Toronto | Chopin & Dvorak

📅 Saturday — March 5, 2022, 8 p.m. ET
📍 LINK
💸 $15+

Pack your bags for a trip through time, as Sinfonia Toronto travels to three very different countries. From Chopin’s Poland to Vania Angelova’s Bulgaria and Dvorak’s American West, hear how composers from far away places found homes in other lands. | Details

Royal Conservatory | Jeremy Denk with Les Violons du Roy

📅 Sunday — March 6, 2022, 3 p.m. ET
📍 LINK
💸 $50+

Anything with pianist Jeremy Denk, let alone Les Violons du Roy, is a Sunday afternoon well spent. You’ll hear Bach and Biber with the Montreal legends, Les Violins de Roy with acclaimed pianist, award-winning virtuoso Jeremy Denk. If the tickets sell out, or you prefer to stay home, catch the livestream for just $20. | Details

#LUDWIGVAN

Get the daily arts news straight to your inbox.

Sign up for the Ludwig van Daily — classical music and opera in five minutes or less HERE.

Michael Vincent
Latest posts by Michael Vincent (see all)
Michael Vincent
Latest posts by Michael Vincent (see all)
Posted on

Week of Women’s Day events planned in Collingwood

Week of Women's Day events planned in Collingwood

Projects will highlight women of Collingwood’s history, female entrepreneurs, and panellists dedicated to advocacy and leading the way in their field

NEWS RELEASE

TOWN OF COLLINGWOOD

***********************

The Town of Collingwood will honour this year’s International Women’s Day (IWD) March 8th with a series of special initiatives dedicated to celebrating the social, economic, cultural, and political achievements of women. The day also marks a call to action for accelerating women’s equality. 

The celebrations begin with the ceremonial Flag Raising & Proclamation Ceremony on March 4 at the Collingwood Public Library. In recognition of inequities that women continue to face, including the disproportionate violence suffered by women, the Town of Collingwood has once again partnered on this observance with My Friend’s House, Collingwood’s safe haven for abused women and their children.

Next, take in the Women in Local History Project, a downtown lamppost exhibit, highlighting Women in Local History from March 4th to 13th. Ten signs celebrating business owners, war-workers, medical professionals, and sports heroes will be displayed along Hurontario Street. This exhibit is produced in partnership with the Collingwood Museum and Sheffield Park Black History and Cultural Museum.

Also taking place March 4 to 13, the Collingwood Downtown Business Improvement Area is celebrating phenomenal women-led businesses that are an integral part of the fabric of Collingwood’s wonderful downtown core. Woman Behind the Business Posters will be hung in business windows throughout the downtown, featuring pictures of the amazing female entrepreneurs behind the businesses and information about the why behind their ventures.  

All posters will also be available online linked to the Collingwood Downtown website for you to read at your leisure as you discover the depth of the female entrepreneurial spirit in our community. As you explore downtown, you will also receive a free gift with purchase from participating merchants; Bookmarks with quotes by female Canadian poets/songwriters have been distributed and many will also include a unique incentive from each business. 

On March 8, a Virtual Panel Discussion will take place at noon.  All are welcome to register for this free Zoom event featuring a panel of extraordinary individuals who will share their experiences and facilitate an open discussion exploring what it means to #BreakTheBias of gender inequity, this year’s IWD theme. 

This year’s speakers are:

  • Marcia Alderson, a singer, real estate agent, advocate for change in the Black community in Collingwood, and a proud member of the Unity Collective poised to inspire world change, community growth and the acceptance of all people all day, everyday.
  • Muckpaloo Ipeelie, an Inuit cultural teacher, public speaker, and owner/operator of “The Urban Inuit Identity Project”. Muckpaloo is a Medical Laboratory Technologist helping to bridge the gap between Inuit people and the circle of care by being proactive against systemic racism and changing the stigma against Indigenous people.
  • Dr. Marissa Rodway-Norman, a senior psychiatrist with more than 30 years of clinical experience and has assisted or led research resulting in the establishment of the North Simcoe Muskoka Trans Health Care Hub of Orillia. She has also spear-headed educational opportunities about trans-medicine and has served as a research consultant to the Gilbert Centre of Barrie, Laurentian University, and the Waypoint Centre for Mental Health.
  • Jill Proud, the facilitator of the session, who has coached and mentored high achieving leaders from seasoned entrepreneurs to Olympic athletes for over 20 years and launched the Women Presidents’ Organization South Georgian Bay Chapter.

Take this opportunity to listen to and learn from these impressive individuals of strength, courage, and hope who have been instrumental in bringing about change in a world still learning to #BreaktheBias. With this virtual event being free to participate, the Town of Collingwood encourages participants, in lieu of a ticket purchase, to consider donating to one of the charities of choice selected by this year’s speakers: 

To register for the panel discussion or for more information on International Women’s Day, please visit www.collingwood.ca/IWD.

Since 2019, the Town of Collingwood has been recognizing International Women’s Day annually on March 8th because we believe in gender equity and seek to improve the lives of all women and girls (trans and cis), two spirit, and gender diverse peoples through cultural, legal, economic, and social change. 

Collingwood’s International Women’s Day celebrations are proudly sponsored by Devonleigh Homes, RBC Dominion Securities, RBC Royal Bank of Canada, Miller Thomson LLP, Collingwood Foundry, Royal Canadian Legion Branch #63, Eager Beaver Services, Baker Tilly and an anonymous community donor. 

About the 2022 International Women’s Day Theme #BreaktheBias

A challenged world is an alert world. Individually, we’re all responsible for our own thoughts and actions – all day, every day! Imagine a gender equal world. A world free of bias, stereotypes, and discrimination. A world that is diverse, equitable, and inclusive. A world where difference is valued and celebrated. Together we can forge women’s equality and collectively, we can all #BreakTheBias.

***********************

Posted on

Look Ahead: Local events and things to do this week, Feb. 27-March 5

Look Ahead: Local events and things to do this week, Feb. 27-March 5

Enjoy fine wine and dining in Park City, eat soup to support an art museum and learn how to volunteer at Red Butte Garden.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Red Butte Garden in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, May 6, 2020.

March 3-5

Enjoy fine wine and dining in Park City

Enjoy fine drinks and dining at the 18th annual Red, White & Snow event held in Park City that benefits the National Ability Center. The three day celebration features ski days, live and silent auctions, a black tie gala dinner, and wineries and chefs from across the country. Tickets for individual event packages range from $250 to $1,200 and can be bought online at bit.ly/3sgCjrx. Note that some events are already sold out.

March 4

Eat soup to support an art museum

Attend the St. George Art Museum’s annual Soup n’ Bowl fundraiser (47 E. 200 N., St. George) on March 4 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The event includes a lunch of soup, bread and dessert, with the soup served in bowls created by local potters. Attendees can also meet some of the potters and buy their work. Tickets are $20 and can be bought online at bit.ly/3pcDXZx or at the event, with proceeds generating support for the museum’s permanent collection.

March 5

Learn how to volunteer at Red Butte Garden

Learn about ways to serve the community by attending Red Butte Garden’s volunteer open house on March 5 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Held in the Red Butte Garden Orangerie (300 Wakara Way, Salt Lake City), attendees can learn about the many volunteer opportunities available, including garden guides, summer camp and youth programs help, and horticulture and event volunteers. See bit.ly/3BLND1W for more information.

Posted on

State Scan: Noteworthy events took place in last week across India

State Scan: Noteworthy events took place in last week across India

Published: Updated On – 05:02 PM, Sun – 27 February 22

Telangana Instead of waiting for the government’s help, some remote villages of Kumram Bheem Asifabad district are literally converting waste into gold by making profits by adopting efficient waste management practices and are able to achieve financial empowerment.

The villages are segregating dry waste as part of the novel initiative Palle Pragati programme implemented by the government and Swachch Bharat Abhiyan. The remote Mandaguda village of Tiryani mandal alone earned Rs 5,224 by selling plastic, damaged glass, and empty beer bottles. Similarly, Dhaboli village in Jainoor mandal recorded Rs 13,015 by vending dry waste. Many villages are earning money by producing vermicompost fertilizer, branded as ‘Panta Siri.’

Andhra Pradesh

To facilitate darshan for more common devotees at the Lord Venkateswara temple, the Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD) has cancelled the VIP break darshan on Saturdays and Sundays. Earlier, the TTD had cancelled VIP darshan on all Fridays. By reallocating the time slot for VIP darshan, the temple body will be able to save at least two hours on the said days, enabling them to provide darshan to at least 3,000-3,500 additional devotees per day. The TTD recently increased the special entry darshan tickets quota as well as the slotted sarva darshan tickets quota to devotees under online and offline modes.

Assam


President Ram Nath Kovind took an elephant safari in Kaziranga National Park on the last day of his three-day visit to Assam. Kovind and his daughter Shweta together rode an elephant, admiring the wilderness and spotting the animals in their natural habitat. Kovind was accompanied by several Assam ministers. They took the ride from Mihimukh point in Kohora range of the national park. The President has also inaugurated a photo and archival exhibition on conservation at Kaziranga. Kovind had arrived in Assam on Friday to participate in a programme launching the 400th birth anniversary celebration of legendary Ahom general Lachit Borphukan at Guwahati.

New Delhi
Popular online discussion platform Reddit, which acquired short-form video social platform Dubsmash late last year, has finally shut down the platform. Dubsmash will not be available to download through the App Store or Google Play. Also, downloaded apps will stop functioning on the same date. “The Dubsmash team has been accelerating Reddit’s video, so parts of Reddit will feel familiar to Dubsmashers,” the company said in the blogpost recently. “Dubsmashers can continue connecting with each other at r/dubsmash and hop over to Reddit to discover an endless stream of new creators and communities that match their many interests and talents,” it added. When Reddit acquired Dubsmash, the app was drawing more than 1 billion video views per month.

Maharashtra

Many parts of Mumbai faced a power outage, which also resulted in the halting of local train services on one of the lines. After over an hour of disruption, the power supply, which had been impacted in south and central Mumbai, started getting restored from around 11 am. The local train services, considered as the lifeline of the country’s financial capital, were halted for an hour. They blamed supply disruption from Tata Power for the difficulties. The city had last faced a major outage in October 2020, which took over 18 hours for the full restoration of services and was blamed on a cyber attack in some quarters.


Now you can get handpicked stories from Telangana Today on Telegram everyday. Click the link to subscribe.

Click to follow Telangana Today Facebook page and Twitter .


Posted on

Events of the Week: ‘The Dropout,’ ‘The Godfather’ 50th Anniversary and More

Events of the Week: ‘The Dropout,’ ‘The Godfather’ 50th Anniversary and More

As Hollywood events return to full force in New York and Los Angeles amid the coronavirus pandemic, here’s a look at the week’s biggest premieres, parties and openings, including red carpets for The Dropout, The Godfather‘s 50th anniversary and season five of Better Things.

The Godfather 50th Anniversary 

“A couple of times I thought I was finished,” Francis Ford Coppola told The Hollywood Reporter on Tuesday night of the ongoing fear he was about to be fired while filming an adaptation of Mario Puzo’s Mafia novel The Godfather. Needless to say, he kept the gig, won three Oscars including best picture and launched a franchise that has become one of the most iconic in history. Coppola returned to the Paramount lot this week to honor the 1972 film’s milestone 50th anniversary, a celebration that included a dedication of Francis Ford Coppola Avenue on the studio lot and a special screening and red carpet event. The latter hosted Coppola and the film’s stars Talia Shire and James Caan along with guests Alden Ehrenreich and Jon Voight and studio brass Brian Robbins, among others. Looking back on how he was able to keep the job, Coppola joked that he pulled some tricks out of his sleeve that had been up there since college. “I was a theater major and I learned how to handle the faculty that was always trying to tell you what to do,” he explained. “When I came out here, I treated executives the same way by bluffing them, basically, and using what little power I had to trick them into getting my way.” — Chris Gardner

Lazy loaded image

Francis Ford Coppola
Steve Granitz/FilmMagic

Lazy loaded image

Francis Ford Coppola, James Caan and Talia Shire
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

Tick, Tick… Boom! 92Y Screening

Andrew Garfield stopped by 92Y on Tuesday for a screening of Tick, Tick … Boom! and a conversation about his career with moderator Annette Insdorf.

Lazy loaded image

Andrew Garfield at 92Y
Courtesy of Michael Priest Photography

Tyler Perry’s A Madea Homecoming premiere

Tyler Perry was joined by costars Brendan O’Carroll, Brandon Black and Isha Blaaker at Tuesday night’s downtown Los Angeles premiere of his latest Madea film, which is streaming on Netflix.

Lazy loaded image

Isha Blaaker, Brandon Black and Tyler Perry
Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images

Cyrano special screening 

NYC’s SVA Theatre hosted a special screening of Cyrano on Wednesday night, where stars Peter Dinklage, Haley Bennett and Kelvin Harrison Jr. and director Joe Wright were joined by MGM chairman of the board Kevin Ulrich, MGM Motion Picture Group chairman Michael De Luca and MGM Motion Picture Group president Pamela Abdy.

Lazy loaded image

Erica Schmidt and Peter Dinklage
Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

Lazy loaded image

Joe Wright, Haley Bennett, Kelvin Harrison Jr. pose with MGM chairman of the board Kevin Ulrich, MGM Motion Picture Group president Pamela Abdy and MGM Motion Picture Group chairman Michael De Luca.
Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

Better Things season five premiere

Pamela Adlon unveiled the fifth and final season of her show Better Things at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery on Wednesday, alongside onscreen daughters Mikey Madison, Hannah Riley and Olivia Edward and costars Kevin Pollak, Alysia Reiner and Greg Cromer.

Lazy loaded image

Hannah Riley, Olivia Edward, Pamela Adlon and Mikey Madison
Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images

Lazy loaded image

Jeremy K. Williams, Hannah Riley, Rebecca Metz, Alysia Reiner, Greg Cromer, Pamela Adlon, Olivia Edward, Mikey Madison, Phil LaMarr, Kevin Pollak and Cree Summer.
JC Olivera/Getty Images

The Dropout Los Angeles premiere

Hulu’s Elizabeth Holmes series The Dropout debuted at the DGA Theatre in L.A. on Thursday, with stars Amanda Seyfried, Naveen Andrews, Alan Ruck, Dylan Minnette, Utkarsh Ambudkar and Elizabeth Marvel, along with showrunner Liz Meriwether and executive producers Michael Showalter and Rebecca Jarvis.

Succession star Ruck, who plays a Walgreens exec partnering with Holmes in the series, said he knew little about the woman before the show: “I had seen Elizabeth’s giant face on a billboard when [Alex Gibney’s The Inventor] documentary came out, I was like, ‘Oh bad lady did something bad in Silicon Valley, that’s bad’ and I didn’t think too much about it,” he told THR. After getting deep into the story, “you realize there’s a human being involved and she’s not a vicious, malicious, deceitful person, she’s misguided I think and she so desperately wanted to believe it was going to happen that she just stopped being able to hear the truth. And the amazing thing is she convinced a lot of other people that she was right.”

And of course, a major element in the portrayal of Holmes is the voice, which the team said Seyfried mastered in her performance. “To see someone bring someone to life so effortlessly and just embody this character so well, it was really inspiring,” said Minnette, as exec producer and ABC News correspondent Jarvis added that she “was blown away” by the actress.

“Not just the voice, which she absolutely nailed, but the mannerisms,” she said. “There’s so many layers to this person and I think Amanda just spent so time researching and digging deep and watching those deposition tapes which we’ve spent so much time with, and I just admire the amount of energy and attention to detail she and the whole team put into this project.”

Lazy loaded image

Chairman, Disney General Entertainment Content for The Walt Disney Company Peter Rice, Liz Meriwether, Amanda Seyfried, Naveen Andrews and chairman, Entertainment for Walt Disney Television Dana Walden
Frank Micelotta/PictureGroup for Hulu

Lazy loaded image

Alan Ruck
Emma McIntyre/WireImage

Lazy loaded image

Rebecca Jarvis, Camryn Mi-young Kim, Katherine Powers, Shaun J. Brown and Dylan Minnette
Amy Sussman/Getty Images

Posted on

Week of Events Highlights Sustainable Development Goals

The campus community is invited to participate in a variety of events that increase awareness of and encourage actions that advance the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

Celebrating the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDG) Action and Awareness Week

Celebrating the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDG) Action and Awareness Week

Sustainable Development Goals Action and Awareness Week 2022 is Feb. 28 – March 4. The campus community is invited to participate in a variety of events that increase awareness of and encourage actions that advance the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

The SDGs were adopted by the UN General Assembly in 2015 as part of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. They address the world’s most monumental challenges, including poverty, inequality, climate change, environmental degradation, and peace and justice. Some of the objectives are improved industry, innovation, and infrastructure; affordable and clean energy; and sustainable cities and communities. The SDGs appear by name in the Institute’s strategic plan as long-term goals that should guide teaching, research, and operations.

SDG Action and Awareness Week 2022 will begin with an interactive campus discussion, titled Engaging With the SDGs Across Campus, focusing on how the goals are being realized across the Institute and ways to better work together across disciplines and departments to amplify our impact. President Ángel Cabrera will moderate the discussion with participants from the College of Sciences, Serve-Learn-Sustain, Interdisciplinary Research, and Engineers Without Borders.

Other events during the week include a Tech Dining Sustainability Showcase, a panel on Infrastructure and Sustainability, Changing Relationships: You and Your Aging Parents, Toilet Talk With Shan and Shannon, A Healthy Georgia: Exploring the Impact of the Energy Transition on Public Health, the Association for Sustainable Investment Podcast Club Kickoff, and Engaging With the SDGs to Advance Sustainability in Atlanta. View a full listing of the week’s events.

In Fall 2020, a panel discussion and keynote address by Cabrera introduced the Tech community to the 17 goals. The event covered their relevance to the Institute and emphasized how Georgia Tech can lead the region in implementing and advancing these goals.

“If we are committed to improving the human condition, then we should embrace the SDGs to guide our actions as a university,” Cabrera said when introducing the SDGs.

SDG Action and Awareness Week is part of a larger global effort through the University Global Coalition, whose partners are hosting a variety of online events that are open to all. 

 

Posted on

CRITIC’S PICKS | Classical Events You Absolutely Need To See This Week: Feb. 21 – 27

CRITIC'S PICKS | Classical Events You Absolutely Need To See This Week: Feb. 21 – 27
Classical music and opera events in Toronto for the week of February 21 to 27.

This is a list of amazing concerts we are attending, wishing we could attend, or thinking about attending between February 21 –  27, 2022. For more details on what’s happening around Toronto, visit our calendar here.

Toronto Symphony Orchestra | Find Your Dream: The Songs of Rodgers & Hammerstein

📅  Tuesday — February 22, 2022, 8 pm ET (Repeats Feb. 23)
📍 LINK
💸 $41+

If you’re a sucker for a good show tune, the TSO’s Pops series should be on your radar this week. Why? Conductor Steven Reineke will lead the Orchestra alongside two Broadway veterans Emily Padgett and Josh Young. You’ll hear classics from The Sound of Music, Carousel, Oklahoma!, and South Pacific. | Details

Royal Conservatory | Víkingur Ólafsson

📅  Thursday — February 24, 2022, 8 pm ET
📍 LINK
💸 $55+

Piano lovers should be lining up for this. Icelandic pianist Víkingur Ólafsson will be performing works from his latest Mozart-heavy CD at Koerner Hall. Ólafsson just might be the most exciting thing to come out of Iceland since Björk, and to hear him at the acoustically pristine Koerner Hall is a treasure. | Details

Royal Conservatory | Angèle Dubeau & La Pietà: Elle – 25th Anniversary Concert

📅  Friday — February 25, 2022, 8 pm ET
📍 LINK
💸 $21+

It’s hard to believe Angèle Dubeau’s La Pietà ensemble is 25 this year. This Friday, they will be in town to celebrate with a collection of classical music by mostly living composers such as Ludovico Einaudi, Olafur Arnalds, Max Richter, and more. Who should go? Besides fans of Dubeau, this is an excellent concert to bring a teenager too — especially one who’s never been to a concert like this. | Details

Toronto Symphony Orchestra | Beethoven’s 4th

📅  Saturday — February 26, 2022, 8 pm ET (Repeats Feb. 27)
📍 LINK
💸 $29+

For those looking for a more varied, slightly unusual program, this is your jam. You’ll hear celebrated Chinese-American conductor, Xian Zhang lead Principal Flute Kelly Zimba Luki in Carl Nielsen’s rarely heard Flute Concerto. The concert also features Nokuthula Ngwenyama’s haunting Primal Message for string orchestra. The show closes with Beethoven’s fourth. | Details

Elixir Baroque Ensemble | 2022 Elixir Mixer

📅  Sunday — February 27, 2022, 5 pm ET
📍 LINK
💸 $25

For those looking for a vibrato-free vibe and a cold elixir in hand, we recommend checking out the Elixir Baroque Ensemble this Sunday. This unique group was started over a decade ago by harpsichordist Sara-Anne Churchill. It grew into a duet, a trio, and a full chamber ensemble. Tickets will be sold at the door beginning at 4 pm. Capacities may be limited, so please arrive early. | Details

#LUDWIGVAN

Get the daily arts news straight to your inbox.

Sign up for the Ludwig van Daily — classical music and opera in five minutes or less HERE.

Michael Vincent
Latest posts by Michael Vincent (see all)
Michael Vincent
Latest posts by Michael Vincent (see all)