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Music

Highlights

  1. Jim White, Your Favorite Songwriter’s Favorite Drummer

    During the last 30 years, the musician has emerged as one of indie-rock’s most distinctive drummers on other people’s records. At last, he’s made his own.

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    At 62, the drummer Jim White is releasing his first solo album, “All Hits: Memories.”
    At 62, the drummer Jim White is releasing his first solo album, “All Hits: Memories.”
    CreditPeter Fisher for The New York Times

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Classical Music

More in Classical Music ›
  1. Peter Eotvos, Evocative Modernist Composer and Conductor, Dies at 80

    A tireless Hungarian advocate of contemporary music, he adapted literary sources both modern and classic, instilling his work with “inimitable character and pathos.”

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    Peter Eotvos in 2022. “We have lost one of the greatest innovators of the Eastern European musical tradition,” the Hungarian film and theater director Kornel Mundruczo said.
    CreditBalazs Mohai/EPA, via Shutterstock
  2. The Encounter That Put the Pianist Kelly Moran on an Unexpected Path

    The 36-year-old musician helped introduce the prepared piano to fresh audiences. Amid personal upheaval, she abandoned it and found a new voice.

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    Kelly Moran’s “Moves in the Field,” due March 29, is her first album in six years.
    CreditBrian Karlsson for The New York Times
  3. Maurizio Pollini, Celebrated Pianist Who Defined Modernism, Dies at 82

    His recordings of Beethoven and Chopin were hailed as classics, but his technical ability sometimes invited controversy.

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    The pianist Maurizio Pollini in 2010 at Carnegie Hall, where he performed an all-Chopin program. He said that being considered a Chopin specialist was “a great honor, the most marvelous thing that can happen to a pianist.”
    CreditHiroyuki Ito for The New York Times
  4. In Frigid Early Spring, Lining Up for a Rite of Summer in Western Massachusetts

    Music lovers stood in the cold this week for a first crack at tickets to Tanglewood, a beloved outdoor venue where the Boston Symphony Orchestra plays all summer long.

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    People stood in the line in the early morning to secure tickets to Tanglewood in Lenox, Mass.
    CreditLauren Lancaster for The New York Times
  5. The Philharmonic Adds 2 Premieres to a Diet of Classics

    Jaap van Zweden, the orchestra’s music director, led new works by Joel Thompson and Tan Dun amid pieces by Mozart, Beethoven and Mendelssohn.

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    Joseph Alessi, the Philharmonic’s principal trombone, performed Tan Dun’s “Three Muses in Video Game.”
    CreditChris Lee
  1. When Sean Combs Was ‘Living the American Dream’

    A restless ambition took him from hip-hop to the Met Gala, a reality show, a fashion label, a fragrance line and his own cable network. Then came the accusations and federal raids.

    By Jacob Bernstein and Vanessa Friedman

     
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  3. 36 Hours

    36 Hours in Mumbai

    Explore ancient caves, catch a concert in a former textile mill, feast on mangoes and go on a poetry crawl in this fast-changing Indian city.

    By Saumya Roy

     
  4. Lil Jon: The Popcast (Deluxe) Interview

    An in-depth interview with the Atlanta hip-hop and EDM legend, tracing his path through punk, skateboarding and crunk music on the way to this year’s Super Bowl.

     
  5. Sean Combs’s Legal Troubles: What We Know

    Federal agents executed search warrants at his homes in Los Angeles and Miami Beach, and he faces several civil lawsuits accusing him of rape and sexual assault.

    By Julia Jacobs and Ben Sisario

     
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