A Tempo with Rachel Katz
Saturday at 7 pm
A Tempo is devoted to issues, challenges and opportunities facing the performing arts. In addition to feature interviews with key people making a difference in the arts, the show also includes relevant news headlines from around the globe.
-
A Tempo this Saturday (4/20 at 7 pm) looks at plans to rename the main concert hall in the Kimmel Center for Marian Anderson, and the Philadelphia Orchestra’s 2024-2025 season.
-
A Tempo Saturday (4/13) talks with choreographer Sydney Skybetter about how dancers can help inform the development of devices and robotic technologies that interact with people.
-
A Tempo this Saturday (4/6 at 7 pm) looks at the third annual Silent Film Festival sponsored by the New School for Music Study, where more than 100 students will perform music to serve as the soundtrack for classic silent films.
-
A Tempo on Saturday (3/30 at 7 pm) previews the Princeton Festival and Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s 2024-2025 season.
-
The Minnesota Orchestra is one of the latest ensembles to explore the connections between music and wellness with its audiences, and A Tempo this Saturday (3/23 at 7 pm) takes a look at its “Music and Healing” initiative.
-
A Tempo this Saturday (3/16 at 7 pm) looks at the inaugural Philadelphia Organ Festival, which features performances at some of the many venues in the city that have pipe organs.
-
Composer Julia Perry was the first African-American woman to have her work performed by the New York Philharmonic, and A Tempo this Saturday (3/9 at 7 pm) previews the upcoming Julia Perry Festival marking the centennial anniversary of her birth.
-
A Tempo this Saturday (3/2 at 7 pm) delves into the Other Minds Archive, which can now be accessed online.
-
A Tempo Saturday (2/17) checks in with Opera Delaware about its ‘Pop-Up’ productions performed on a mobile stage around its community.
-
A Tempo this Saturday (2/3 at 7 pm) features a newly commissioned opera by Houston Grand Opera and Asia Society Texas to celebrate the Lunar New Year.