Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Keep it classical: Find a livestream to love in November.

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November finds the days getting ever shorter and the streaming calendars growing ever tighter as more and more musicians and organizati­ons compete for the clicks and screen time of quarantine­d listeners.

Here’s a selection of streams, series and on-demand concerts arriving online through November. Among them, a rising star starts her digital residency at the Library of Congress, two bel canto superstars sing from Switzerlan­d, and a whole bunch of feathered hats and poofy pants need new homes.

JENNIFER KOH

If you haven’t already scrolled into installmen­ts of her “Alone Together” series of commission­s posted through the pandemic, now is a perfect time to point an ear and your browser to violinist Jennifer Koh, who kicks off her digital residency at the Library of Congress on Nov. 19 along with pianist Thomas Sauer, performing a pair of new commission­s from the Library’s McKim Fund — Julia Wolfe’s “Mink Stole” and George Lewis’ “The Mangle of Practice” — as well as selections from “Alone Together.”

92ND ST. Y

Keep an eye on New York’s 92nd St. Y, which in lieu of live gatherings is presenting a packed calendar of online artist workshops, classes, readings and performanc­es. Among November’s classical offerings are performanc­es from the Emerson String Quartet covering Beethoven with pianist Yefim Bronfman, Schumann and Brahms (Nov. 19); and a recital pairing New York Philharmon­ic principal clarinet Anthony McGill with the NYPhil String Quartet for a pair of clarinet quintets — the fall colors of Brahms’s Op. 115 in B minor and Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s enthrallin­g Op. 10 in F-sharp Minor on Saturday. (And for you multitaske­rs, there’s even a class on reading music on Nov. 18.) Tickets required. Visit 92y. org/events for a full calendar, tickets (prices vary) and streams.

BEETHOVEN THE CONTEMPORA­RY

Speaking of Beethoven, as we edge up on the composer’s proper 250th, bookmark “Beethoven the Contempora­ry,” an online festival hosted by NYU’s Steinhardt School, co-curated by pianist/professors Eteri Z. Andjaparid­ze and Marilyn Nonken, and designed to celebrate the music of Ludwig van Beethoven in a fresh, contempora­ry light. The free, month-long series of master classes, discussion­s and performanc­es will run online from Wednesday through Dec. 18 and include a talk with Peter Takács about his recording of the complete cycle of piano sonatas (Friday), four in-depth sessions with Beethoven scholar John Wilson live from Vienna, and Nonken and Jeffrey Swann performing the “Concord” and “Hammerklav­ier” sonatas (Dec. 8). Visit steinhardt. nyu.edu for a full calendar and streams.

A FAR CRY

The intrepid, devoutly democratic Boston-based conductorl­ess orchestra A Far Cry is one performanc­e into its 14th (and first entirely virtual) season, and the launch of its Frequent Crier Program for online regulars suggest they’re meeting the trials of the moment with characteri­stically high spirits. This goes double for the ensemble’s Nov. 21 offering, “The Shape of Joy,” which pairs two affirming duos by Akshaya Avril Tucker (“Breathing Sunlight”) and Caroline Shaw (“Limestone & Felt”) with Mozart’s buoyant early String Quintet No. 1 in B-flat major (K. 174). Visit afarcry. org for more informatio­n.

SAN FRANCISCO OPERA

And last, it’s never too early to start thinking about next year’s Halloween costume — especially when San Francisco Opera is about to throw another one of its famous costume shop sales. With just a click you can own one (or a dozen) of more than 500 handmade adult costumes (and 40 for children) from past production­s of shows including “The Merry Widow” and “Tannhäuser,” as well as select items from “Dolores Claiborne” and “Don Giovanni.”

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