Woman found fatally shot in St. Paul apartment

posted in: All news | 0

St. Paul police are investigating a shooting that killed a woman in the Dayton’s Bluff area.

Officers responded about 4:15 p.m. Friday to an apartment building in the 500 block of Broadway Street, which is near downtown and close to Interstate 94 and East Seventh Street.

Inside an apartment, officers found a woman who had been shot in the head, police said in a statement. Preliminary evidence indicated the woman was shot Thursday. Police recovered a firearm at the scene.

As of Friday night, police said an active search is underway for the suspect.

The homicide was the 14th of the year in St. Paul.

There were 32 homicides in the city as of this time last year. The police department counts 29 homicides because it doesn’t include a shooting by officers, in which they were legally cleared, and two cases in St. Paul that were investigated by Metro Transit police.

Related Articles


St. Paul man gets 17 years in prison for 2 rapes 12 years apart


St. Paul man killed Maplewood woman, shot self, then live-streamed an apology, charges say


Student injured, man dead in shooting outside southeastern Minnesota high school


Gov. Tim Walz appoints former BCA chief as state fraud czar


Sherrone Moore charged with stalking, home invasion after being fired as Michigan football coach

SPCO shines with its seasonal presentation of ‘Brandenburg’ Concertos

posted in: All news | 0

As part of its annual tradition, the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra presents five out of the six “Brandenburg” Concertos written by Johann Sebastian Bach. While not composed as Christmas music, the festive spirit of the works aligns perfectly with the season, making them a beloved secular treat.

The concertos also reveal the magnetism and intimacy of the chamber form. With unusual combinations of instruments — often highlighting players who don’t typically get the spotlight — the music allows individual musicians to shine within small, agile ensembles.

The Friday performance began with the “Brandenburg” Concerto No. 1, featuring three oboes, two horns and a violin soloist. With its merry spirit and dance-like energy, the work’s warm sound derives from the resonant horns, while the oboes add a delicate timbre. Eunae Koh delivered an impressive, assertive statement on violin, her lines weaving through the texture with clarity.

The second movement opens with the startling beauty of an oboe solo, soon taken up by the violin. In the third, a horn ascends so high it nearly mimics the softness of a flute. By the fourth, the various sections trade phrases like members of a lively assembly, each contributing its own voice to the spirited conversation.

The St. Paul Chamber Orchestra performing at the Ordway in 2024. The Orchestra is performing Bach’s “Brandenburg” Concertos at the same venue through Dec. 14, 2025. (Claire Loes/The St. Paul Chamber Orchestra).

The orchestra then moved to the Sixth Concerto, the only work in the set that omits violins entirely. With two violas at the center, the piece settles into a warm, dusky sound. During the second movement, a mellow tone emerges, lines unfolding with a quiet glow that feels inward and unhurried. Then in the third movement, a familiar melody jumps brightly in and out of the texture before slipping into double time, creating a swirling sense of motion that lifts the concerto’s darker palette into something unexpectedly buoyant.

After intermission came the Fifth Concerto, where the harpsichord takes command. Jeffrey Grossman played with ceaseless motion, shifting gears effortlessly and attacking Bach’s intricate passages with assertive vigor. The harpsichord’s extended cadenza at the end of the first movement feels almost unhinged in its exuberance, evoking the frenetic energy of a video game soundtrack.

The program then moved to the Third Concerto, a piece so popular with student orchestras that its opening bars are practically a rite of passage. But in the hands of the SPCO, the work’s structure came into sharper relief. Though it technically lacks designated soloists, the writing turns nearly every musician into one, each line racing through quick motion and tight interplay. The ensemble’s articulation was crisp, giving the music a buoyant, athletic edge, a pulse that reflects the mathematical precision underlying all the concertos.

Bach’s “Brandenburg” Concertos are pure geometry — an exercise in balance and weight, in the adornment of each line, and in the beauty of musical mathematics. Their invigorating pulse can feel almost physiological, quickening the heartbeat as one pattern unlocks another.

Finally, the performance concluded with the Fourth Concerto, featuring principal violin Kyu-Young Kim alongside flutists Julia Bogorad-Kogan and Alicia McQuerrey. Kim played with a light, quicksilver touch, spinning out fast notes with a dancer’s poise, while the two flutes echoed and entwined around him, brightening the texture with airy brilliance. The concerto’s interplay — nimble, conversational, and joyous — made for an uplifting finale.

St. Paul Chamber Orchestra

What: Bach’s “Brandenburg” Concertos

When: 7 p.m. Saturday,  2 p.m. Sunday

Where: The Ordway, 345 Washington St., St. Paul

Tickets: thespco.org

Capsule: A secular holiday tradition relishing in the chamber form.

Related Articles


St. Paul Chamber Orchestra announces balanced budget


Headliners announced for third annual Minnesota Yacht Club Festival


Rod Stewart to play the Grandstand in what’s likely his final local concert


Raul Malo, the soulful tenor and frontman of The Mavericks, has died at age 60


Goo Goo Dolls, Toto/Christopher Cross and Avenged Sevenfold to play Shakopee amphitheater

Christmas comes early as Wild trade for star D Quinn Hughes from Vancouver

posted in: All news | 0

Last summer at the start of free agency, Wild owner Craig Leipold floated the idea that, for the team’s fans, it could be Christmas in July.

On Friday night, general manager Bill Guerin reminded fans that Christmas comes in December.

With the Wild battling Colorado and Dallas for supremacy in the Central Division, Guerin pulled off perhaps the biggest in-season move in the franchise’s 25-year history, bringing superstar defenseman Quinn Hughes to Minnesota for at least this season and next.

Guerin sent young defenseman Zeev Buium, center Marco Rossi, forward Liam Ohgren — all of them former first-rounders — and a first-round selection in the 2026 NHL draft to the Vancouver Canucks for Hughes, who is widely considered one of the top two or three blueliners in the NHL.

Hughes, 26, is a two-time All-Star and won the Norris Trophy — given to the NHL’s best defenseman — following the 2023-24 season.

Mel Pearson, who recruited Hughes to Michigan and coached him for two seasons there, including a trip to the Frozen Four in St. Paul in 2018, said the Wild won the trade.

“He’s just a great, great pickup for Minnesota,” Pearson said. “I know they gave up quite a bit to get him but there are only so many Norris Trophy-type defensemen in the NHL.”

Hughes has scored 16 and 17 goals the past two seasons, but he’s been limited to two goals, 21 assists in 26 games this season. During his Norris-winning campaign, he had 17 goals and 75 assists for 92 points.

Guerin, the general manager for Team USA at the upcoming Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, had made it clear that Hughes would be on the team in February in Italy. Hughes is working on a six-year contract that pays him $7.8 million per season through the end of the 2026-27 campaign.

Quinn’s brothers, Jack and Luke, both play for the New Jersey Devils currently. The Wild could offer Quinn an extension starting on July 1, 2026.

Related Articles


Wild recall David Jiricek with Jonas Brodin questionable vs. Ottawa


Wild comeback cools off streaking Stars


Mats Zuccarello is latest Wild injured reserve addition


‘Full-time hockey dad’ Zach Parise takes his place in USHHF


Wild survive slugfest in Seattle

Exactly 15 years later, Vikings share memories of Metrodome collapse

posted in: All news | 0

It’s hard to believe it’s already been 15 years since the Metrodome infamously caved in after a blizzard that brought nearly a foot and a half of snow to the Twin Cities.

It created a logistical nightmare for the Vikings, as they had to postpone their scheduled home game against the New York Giants and move it to Ford Field in Detroit. Then, they hosted their final home game against the Chicago Bears at TCF Bank Stadium on the University of Minnesota campus.

That primetime matchup between the Vikings and Bears on Monday Night Football the following week ended up being the the last time Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre ever put on the pads. A nasty hit from Bears defensive end Corey Wooten resulted in Favre’s head hitting the frozen playing surface. It left him unconscious for a few seconds and he never suited up again.

It shouldn’t come as a surprise that no player on the current roster was actually on the Vikings when the Metrodome collapsed on Dec. 12, 2010. The only player even remotely close was veteran safety Harrison Smith, the longest tenured player, who was selected by the Vikings in the 2012 draft.

The only native Minnesotans on the current roster are fullback C.J. Ham and linebacker Blake Cashman. At the time of the Metrodome collapse exactly 15 years ago, Ham was a student at Duluth Denfeld High School, while Cashman hadn’t yet reached Eden Prairie High School.

“I remember sitting in the kitchen at my dad’s house and it being on the front page of the newspaper,” Cashman said. “We were talking about it and, of course, it led to some discussions about how the Vikings needed a new place anyways.”

A few years later, the Vikings hosted their final home game at the Metrodome, beating the Lions to make sure they went out in style. Not long after that, ground broke on U.S. Bank Stadium and the Vikings hosted their first home game there on Sept. 18, 2016.

Asked if he could imagine what it would be like if U.S. Bank Stadium collapsed, Ham shook his head and laughed at the thought of it.

“No I couldn’t,” Ham said. “Just being in the middle of the year and having it crumble would be catastrophic.”

Luckily for the Vikings, that should never been an issue at U.S. Bank Stadium, regardless of how many feet of snow future blizzards bring to the Twin Cities.

Not that Metrodome collapsing into itself could ever take away its charm.

“I spent a lot of time at the Metrodome growing up,” Cashman said with a smile. “I have a lot of good memories there.”

Briefly

The only players on the Vikings that showed up the injury report ahead of the primetime game against the Dallas Cowboys were running back Ty Chandler (knee) and left tackle Christian Darrisaw (knee). They are both listed as questionable.

Related Articles


Vikings navigate hateful rhetoric created by fantasy football


The Loop NFL Picks: Week 15


Vikings star Justin Jefferson still cares about reaching 1,000 yards


J.J. McCarthy finally looked the part for the Vikings. Is it sustainable?


The Loop Fantasy Football Report Week 15: Some subs needed for fantasy playoff relief