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Review: The Florida Orchestra

Andrew Meacham, Tampa Bay Times, 5th November 2016

“The main attraction, Symphony No. 41, by Mozart, was thrilling in a different way…the music changes just at the moment you think you know where it is going.

It opens in a C-major key, a grand declaration, then seems to retract that promise in the next few bars […]

Review: Komische Oper

Peter Uehling, Berliner Zeitung, October 2016

“The soloists of Komische Oper were also in excellent form, embedded in a string sound manifoldly shaded by Michael Francis. In the “Sea Interludes” from Britten’s “Peter Grimes”, he showed a great sense of creating effects, in Schumann’s Rhenish Symphony he proved to be an enormously stringent (compelling) interpreter.”

Florida Orchestra’s opens season in smashing form with Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9

Andrew Meacham, Tampa Bay Times, 1st October 2016

“Hearing [Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9] live, as the Florida Orchestra gives us a chance to do with the opening of its season this weekend, renews appreciation as only a performance can. A full Morsani Hall at the David A. Straz Jr. Center for the Performing Arts on […]

Florida Orchestra season lineup features world-class talent, a mix of classics and new work

Andrew Meacham,Tampa Bay Times, 22nd September 2016

As a conductor of the Florida Orchestra, Michael Francis spends time on the details. He is the border collie nipping at the herd, the proofreader who preserves accuracy to the text, the timekeeper.

As music director, he revels in the big ideas. Francis, 40, opens the Florida Orchestra’s latest […]

Cleveland Orchestra muses run to London and Paris on charming weekend at Blossom

Zachary Lewis, The Plain Dealer, 18th July 2016

“British conductor Michael Francis made his Cleveland Orchestra debut Saturday night with a mostly English program…and concluded with a stunning realization of Vaughan Williams’ epic Symphony No. 2, a portrait of the city the composer lived in and loved for significant periods…

Francis led a brilliant and committed […]

Mainly Mozart Festival explores nature of prodigies

Marcus Overton, San Diego Union-Tribune, 20th June 2016

“Two Mozart symphonies — nos. 5 and 52 — were played with an attention to detail that swept aside problems that always bedevil this transparent music: attacks and releases were immaculate, and intonation was superb.”

Papa Haydn’s got a brand new bag: Mozart and Schubert at Mainly Mozart

Stanwell Anderson, San Diego Reader, 18th June 2016

“…the level of [Schubert’s] counterpoint in the fourth movement is breathtaking, and my breath was surely taken away by the virtuosity of the MMF Orchestra, and their dapper, elegant, and gesticulationally eloquent conductor, Michael Francis.”

Schubert and Mozart: the Teen Years Exposed

Ken Herman, San Diego Story, 16th June 2016

“Although most conductors pay scant attention to Schubert’s first four symphonies, Francis made a compelling case for Schubert’s Symphony No. 1 in D Major. Based on Joseph Haydn’s sturdy classical four-movement design, Schubert’s First Symphony sails through those well-charted waters with buoyant optimism. From the orchestra, Francis […]

Mainly Mozart Festival Opens: Prodigies on Parade

Ken Herman, San Diego Story, 6th June 2016

“[Regarding Mozart’s Gallimathias musicum] Francis’ violins sported a mellifluous shimmer, and the entire orchestra’s tight rhythmic ensemble maintained its fresh, buoyant air from start to finish…

Francis gave [Mozart’s Bastien und Bastienne] score a spirited interpretation, full of youthful optimism…

In its opening night offering, the Mainly Mozart […]

Mainly Mozart explores composer’s childhood works

Martina Schimitschek, The San Diego Union-Tribune, 29th May 2016

Say the word prodigy and, for many, one person immediately comes to mind: Mozart.

“Mozart is still the gold standard for prodigies. He’s our rule of thumb. People will say, he’s the Mozart of soccer, the Mozart of art or the Mozart of jazz,” said Michael Francis, […]