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  • From San Diego weekend arts events roundup (KPBS): Rafael Payare conducts the San Diego Symphony at The Shell Friday evening, featuring guest pianist Inon Barnatan, known in town as the La Jolla Music Society's SummerFest music director. Barnatan will perform Ravel's jazz-tinged Concerto in G with the symphony, a lively and sweeping work. The symphony will also perform Mahler's lovely and majestic Symphony No. 1 and a 2014 work by contemporary Venezuelan-American composer Reinaldo Moya. This piece, "Siempre lunes, siempre marzo (Always Monday, Always March)" was inspired by Gabriel García Márquez’s "One Hundred Years of Solitude" — in the book, there's a room where time moves strangely, where it's always Monday, and it's always March. From the Symphony: Renowned pianist and La Jolla Music Society SummerFest Music Director Inon Barnatan performs Maurice Ravel's sublime Concerto in G. Music Director Rafael Payare leads the Orchestra in Gustav Mahler’s monumental and glorious Symphony No. 1. The evening opens with Reinaldo Moya's hauntingly beautiful work inspired by Gabriel García Márquez’s novel One Hundred Years of Solitude. ARTISTS AND REPERTOIRE: Rafael Payare, conductor Inon Barnatan, piano San Diego Symphony Orchestra PROGRAM: REINALDO MOYA: Siempre lunes, siempre marzo (Always Monday, Always March) RAVEL: Piano Concerto in G Major MAHLER: Symphony No. 1 in D Major, Titan [5 movement version (with Blumine)] Inon Barnatan's appearance with the San Diego Symphony is made possible, in part, through the generosity of Alan Benaroya.
  • With an April reopening date, the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego's La Jolla campus is finalizing construction and almost ready to hang art — including a special exhibition featuring Niki de Saint Phalle's 1960s works.
  • Tony Dow, who played Wally Cleaver on the hit TV show Leave It To Beaver, has died at 77. He had cancer.
  • Join us and experience the art of the victorian tea! Victorian Country Christmas is an event where you can shop and enjoy hand-crafted jewelry, textiles, pottery, wreaths, soaps, wood items, vintage china and more! The Victorian Craft Fair and Tea festival will take place at El Cajon Elks Lodge from Friday, November 12 through Sunday, November 14 on the following schedule: • Friday: Noon to 7 p.m. • Saturday: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. • Sunday: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Get tickets here! – THIS EVENT IS SOLD OUT Admission is $25 per person. Proceeds benefit youth activities and veteran’s services. For more information, please visit www.elcajonvcc.com or contact Eugenia Jenness at jennesses@cox.net or at (619) 818-1527.
  • The implosion of Silicon Valley Bank could force hundreds of tech startups to lay off workers or shut down completely. It remains unclear how much, if any, of depositors' money will be returned.
  • Families who had their lives shattered on Dec. 14, 2012, are still straining under the weight of their losses — and still pushing for the changes they had hoped would have already happened by now.
  • A law requires schools to display signs with "In God We Trust" on them if they are donated, but it doesn't mention a required language.
  • TCM Classic Film Festival is back in person in Hollywood. TCM host Alicia Malone and TCM programmer Scott McGee will both be at the festival to sign copies of their new books. Cinema Junkie speaks with both authors.
  • The new additions include a moose, a blackbird, a goose and a jellyfish. You will soon have a pink heart and a "shook face" at your fingertips, too.
  • A boil-water notice, which has been in effect since July, is forcing many restaurant owners to travel to nearby cities to obtain water and ice. It's costing them considerable time and money.
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