Tim Diovanni | The Dallas Morning News
Tim Diovanni is reporting on classical music in a fellowship supported in part by the Rubin Institute for Music Criticism, the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and the Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation. The News makes all editorial decisions.
-
Kevin Day, an Arlington-raised composer and Texas Christian University graduate, is getting commissions and having his works performed around the world. The Dallas Winds soon play his Concerto for Wind Ensemble and the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra is commissioning him to write a double concerto for trombone and piano.
-
The slow return of audiences is even forcing one D-FW company to close down.
-
She was one of the very few Black American women ever to run an opera company. And she's leaving after only two years — the third general director the company's had in five years.
-
In our series on the arts and the economy, we examine what’s next.
-
The Dallas and Fort Worth symphony orchestras are among those addressing the racial disparity.
-
Fort Worth’s Bass Performance Hall gives guests options to prove they don’t have COVID-19. Masking is also required at Bass Hall and other local venues.
-
The pandemic pushed the Dallas Symphony Orchestra to create its own concert videos. PBS stations nationwide are airing one this month, featuring a collaboration between the DSO and Metropolitan Opera Orchestra.
-
On Sept. 1, the permitless carry law takes effect, allowing unlicensed gun owners to carry a concealed or holstered handgun.
-
North Texas arts groups are welcoming back audiences while balancing delta variant fears, new Texas orders and evolving CDC guidelines.
-
Performing arts groups are trying to safely attract wider audiences, while wooing back those who may be wary to return.