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PODCASTS:

Sharon Ruchman: How A Gift From The Past Sparked A Whole New Career Direction

CRUSHING CLASSICAL PODCAST
With Jennet Ingle

It’s Never Too Late with Sharon Ruchman

ADHD REWIRED PODCAST
Episode 341

PRESS:

Non-Utah Indies We Dig: “No Regrets” by Sharon Ruchman and SONORO

Provo magazine article

Feb 28, 2024
By: Provo Music Magazine

This almost feels like Chopin at a speakeasy, and I mean that in the best way. With so much music in the Provo music scene, it’s easy to get sucked in and start listening to music in a bubble. It’s always great to see what awaits you in the broader world of sonic textures, and to find new recommendations that can inspire you to make music differently than you did before. “No Regrets” by Sharon Ruchman and SONORO will definitely broaden the horizons of anyone who gives it a spin.

Check out the full article here.

Illustrate Magazine’s Exclusive interview with Sharon Ruchman & Sonoro

sonoro-illustrate-magazine

Feb 6, 2024
By: Illustrate Magazine

At the forefront of NEW classical music are Sharon Ruchman and SONORO, who use a variety of flexible instrumentation, such as piano, flute, saxophone, viola, cello, bass, and percussion, to create a playful and romantic blend of classical, jazz, blues, and Latin sounds. Composed by Sharon Ruchman and produced by Marc Wager Weisgal, the original work pushes the limits of modern rhythms to produce a distinctive sonic fusion.

Check out the exclusive interview here.

So allow Sharon Ruchman and the band Sonoro to sublimate your moments with the very radiant track “No Regrets”

sonoro-iggy-magazine

Feb 2024
By: Iggy Magazine

For lovers of high and exceptional quality music, you are invited to the unique and exclusive performance of a music group that has chosen to give you intense sensations and moments of incredible thrills. For Sharon Ruchman and the Sonoro music group, quality work is a motto. For the track “No Regrets”, the artists didn’t pretend.

Check out the full article here.

Late musician’s work lives on through Litchfield author, composer

Sep 18, 2019, 11:26am | Updated on Sep 18, 2019
By: News 12 Staff

The grand-niece of a talented musician whose life was tragically cut short at the Chicago World’s Fair is continuing her uncle’s work.

Rudolph Fuchs was a virtuoso.

“He was considered one of the great violinist of his generation,” Sharon Ruchman says.

But his life was tragically cut short when he took a plane tour above the Chicago World’s Fair in 1933.

“The plane crashed,” Ruchman says. “The plane hit wind and it think went up and down a few times and then it went up in flames.”

Over two decades later, Ruchman says she sat down at the piano for the first time as a 5-year-old girl and began taking lessons at 8 years old.

Read the full article