By Laurie Niles: In an effort to promote the coverage of live violin performance, Violinist.com each week presents links to reviews of notable concerts and recitals around the world.![James Ehnes]()
James Ehnes. Photo by Benjamin Ealovega.James Ehnes performed the Walton Violin Concerto with the BBC Philharmonic.Itzhak Perlman performed music from films with the Philadelphia Orchestra.Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center performed a recital in Amsterdam.

James Ehnes. Photo by Benjamin Ealovega.
- theartsdesk.com: "(The Walton is) incredibly difficult (written for Heifetz), but Ehnes is a player who makes such challenges seem easy. There was lovely sweetness in the brief quasi-cadenza of the first movement, echoed time and again in what followed. His intonation is impeccable and his tone sheer joy to listen to in this fastidious soundworld."
- The Inquirer: "... he puts across a terrific presence not just volume, but often a saturation that goes full force to the end of the phrase. And then theres that silvery tone, which, after all, doesnt come along often."
- The Boston Musical Intelligencer: "Here his technique and artistic maturity were evident from the outset....Yang fashioned a long line from his opening solo, his tone both bright and warm, and Zander made the ostinatos ominous."
- Violinist.com: "The CMS artists exuberant music making never came at the cost of sensitivity and impeccable turns of phrase and every tempo change was wrought with care"
- San Francisco Classical Voice: "If Kopatchinskajas performance style was affectation designed for effect it would qualify as extraneous gimmickry. It is not. All of that playful body language the energetic head bobbing to the music, the deliberate come on, lets go eye contact with the other players, her foot stomping, is all part of her interpretation and expression."
- The Herald Scotland: "Although (Elfman's concerto) makes its most immediate connection with the audience through the charismatic Ms. Cameron, it is a piece that the orchestra has come to love, and which the players and conductor Thomas Sondergard performed with the same panache they brought to Prokofievs Fifth Symphony wherever they played it."