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Blog Posts About Classical Music

A loosely sorted and lightly annotated catalogue of through the music posts on this blog.

February 16, 2026 Â· Ariana Tang

The Martingale Decomposition Step by Step

Interactive walkthrough of the four-step martingale decomposition of an additive functional, with a CLT check.

July 5, 2026 Â· Ariana Tang

Likelihood Shrink

This was one of my favourite during Empirical Analysis III course. ...

July 4, 2026 Â· Ariana Tang

Albéniz's Tango | España, Op. 165 No. 2

The most famous tango in concert music.

July 2, 2026 Â· Ariana Tang

Kapustin's Toccatina | 8 Concert Études, Op. 40 No. 3

Jazz that behaves like Bach.

July 1, 2026 Â· Ariana Tang

Rach 3 by Olga Kern and the Grant Park Orchestra

The Grant Park Music Festival’s outdoor venue is at the Jay Pritzker Pavilion, sitting in the heart of downtown Chicago around the skyscrapers. Your browser doesn't support the video tag. Tonight’s concert featured the Grant Park Orchestra, Carlos Kalmar and pianist Olga Kern, playing a magnificent program: Sergei Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 3 Igor Stravinsky Game of Cards Edward Elgar In the South The outdoor festival is exactly like the Frank Gehry architecture — it pierce through the air and stand firmly among the Chicago skyscrapers. You feel more the shape and less the nuance. Rachmaninoff carries through with Olga Kern’s powerful playing, very metallic, sculptured and sharp. She played the first original cadenza for mvt I written by Rachmaninoff. My pianist friend think it’s the best cadenza ever written and its early appearance even shadows rest of the concerto movements.

July 1, 2026 Â· Ariana Tang

Chopin Nocturne Op. 32 No. 2, again | Pollini

The same nocturne, the other temperament.

June 30, 2026 Â· Ariana Tang

Goldberg Variations on the Harpsichord | Esfahani, BWV 988

The Goldbergs returned to the instrument they were written for.

June 29, 2026 Â· Ariana Tang

Friedman's 'Positive Economics'

The idea originates in Milton Friedman’s essay “The Methodology of Positive Economics” (1953), the opening chapter of his book Essays in Positive Economics (University of Chicago Press, 1953, pp. 3–43). Basically, Friedman’s central idea is, a theory should be judged by the accuracy of its predictions within its intended domain — not by whether its assumptions are realistic or descriptively accurate. And further — “the more significant the theory, the more unrealistic the assumptions.” So we should use the “as if” method. Model agents as if the assumptions held. Three examples: the expert billiard player (plays as if solving the physics), leaves on a tree (arranged as if maximizing sunlight), the profit-maximizing firm (behaves as if optimizing; competition weeds out those that don’t). Tie-breakers. When theories predict equally well, prefer greater simplicity and fruitfulness (scope, precision, new research). Friedman’s original essay is ambiguous, contested but never settled. I printed it as part of my Price Theory I readings and it now lies with my Bach sonata sheets… ...

June 28, 2026 Â· Ariana Tang

Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No.1 at Grank Park Music Festival

Conducted by Edwin Outwater, with soloist Sara Davis Buechner, the Grant Park Orchestra performed Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1. The evening also offered a pleasantly modern program: Jimmy López Loud Lou Harrison Symphony No. 2 (“Elegiac”) Amy Woodforde-Finden Kashmiri Song Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 1 The orchestra has a lovely sound and plays as a tight, well-coordinated ensemble. The pieces are a nice surprise — very well-curated. Even so, I wasn’t especially looking forward to the Tchaikovsky — this is a festival, and a free concert at that (bravo!) — since the concerto’s solemnity asks for a certain seriousness rather than a cheerful summer spirit. But the first three pieces eased the audience nicely into the mood. ...

June 27, 2026 Â· Ariana Tang