Giancarlo Guerrero receives Best Classical Compendium nomination for his recording of works by Jonathan Leshnoff with the Nashville Symphony and Jason Vieaux.
Read MoreGiancarlo Guerrero leads the São Paulo Symphony in performances featuring Manuel Barrueco and José Staneck in new album out November 8
Read MoreCSO review: A joyous and all-too-rare evening of Spanish and Latin American music
Read MoreOn May 2, Holocaust Remembrance Day, Naxos will release world premiere recordings of music by composer Jonathan Leshnoff performed by the Nashville Symphony, conductor Giancarlo Guerrero and guitarist Jason Vieaux, including Leshnoff’s Symphony No. 4 “Heichalos,” written for the Violins of Hope, a collection of instruments played by Jewish musicians during the Holocaust.
Read More“Giancarlo Guerrero brings out not just the drama but also the many subtleties in the score...John Harbison has been well served by this recording.”
Read More“Given the results of this recording, it is no surprise that the Nicaraguan, raised in Costa Rica, Music Director in Nashville and Principal Guest in Lisbon, be a conductor increasingly valued everywhere.”
Read More“Ponzio successfully brings life to her bronzes, using the language of the figure to speak of emotional experiences. In the bronze bust of Guerrero, she was able to capture his seriousness as an artist and his joy in creating music.”
Read More“The Nashville Symphony Chorus has really grasped the measure of this music and delivers a compelling account, with exemplary diction, bundles of rhythmic energy when needed and even tone. Together with four excellent soloists, Giancarlo and his Nashville forces deliver a first rate performance of the piece.”
Read More"All told, this is a solidly reliable account of a worthwhile work.”
Read More“The choral and orchestral forces are magnificent throughout and Giancarlo Guerrero keeps them moving and fully committed. The recording, made during performances in May 2017 at Schermerhorn Symphony Center, has the size and space it needs to capture the colors and textures of Harbison’s rich orchestration and the impact of his powerful vision.”
Read More“It’s the kind of music you will want to listen to multiple times, appreciating the skill of the composition and the sweep of the performances…Highly recommended.”
Read More“Everything conspired to make this concert at once a worthy celebration of Gary Graffman’s 90th birthday and a musical experience worthy of the much-loved former Curtis president’s lofty standards…Giancarlo Guerrero is quite a conductor, and his leadership, abetted by the contributions of an equally accomplished and subtle soloist and a lavishly talented student orchestra, pulled off the rare feat of making Rachmaninoff’s Third Piano Concerto sound like a work I was hearing for the first time.” (Photo Credit: David DeBalko)
Read More“The concert was pretty fabulous.” Dallas Morning News
“A technicolor romp through some of the most exciting works in the repertoire.” Theater Jones
“Guerrero brings insight (and showmanship) to DSO.” Texas Classical Review
Read MoreGiancarlo Guerrero performs Mussorgsky, Rimsky-Korsakov and Jennifer Higdon's Violin Concerto with violinist Benjamin Beilman
Read More“4.5 Stars…It is rare for me to feel the urge to hear the same program for a second time, but I would in this case.”
Read MoreFor those that don’t know Nashville well, one might think it is purely a country music destination, but it is so much more. Country music is just one aspect of the vibrant art scene here. Giancarlo Guerrero, Conductor and Music Director of the Nashville Symphony, has helped the music scene grow in diversity and has helped to continue to make Nashville a leading destination for visitors and residents to experience all types of music and art.
Read MoreFeaturing three of the orchestra’s principal musicians, the new recording out February 9, 2018 includes Wind Concertos by Behzad Ranjbaran, Frank Ticheli and Brad Warnaar
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