Classical music
Ragged Music Festival review - musical utopia in an East End schoolroomTuesday, 06 October 2020![]() A muse of fire descended on the top floor of a former warehouse in the East End, unextinguished by the rain which fell almost continuously outside during the four stupendous concerts – three advertised, one a generous bonus – of the Ragged Music... Read more... |
Bryn Terfel, Britten Sinfonia, Barbican review – a moment of re-connectionMonday, 05 October 2020This concert by Sir Bryn Terfel and the Britten Sinfonia, the very first concert given at the Barbican in front of an audience since 15 March, was surely in need of some stronger explanation than that offered by the blurb for the evening, namely “... Read more... |
First Person: Gregory Batsleer on choirs for the 21st centurySaturday, 03 October 2020![]() Choral music is one of the UK’s oldest and most-loved art forms. It has been at the centre of my life ever since I started singing in primary school and has grown to become a crucial part of my identity as both a musician and artist. I am a signed-... Read more... |
Istanbul International Music Festival online review – East-West flair and finesseSaturday, 03 October 2020![]() Salzburg, Verbier and other high-end festivals have scraped together reduced, still impressive programmes over the summer for consumption online. Not so starrily cast but hardly less engaging in situ is the adapted offering from Istanbul, mixing... Read more... |
Classical CDs Weekly: Kemel Belevi, Schoenberg, Ondřej VrabecSaturday, 03 October 2020![]() Kemal Belevi: Guitar Duos Duo Tandem (Naxos)I might have responded to Kemal Belevi’s music differently had I not encountered him straight after a few hours spent with Schoenberg (see below). These pieces for two guitars don’t do anything earth... Read more... |
Danny Driver, Wigmore Hall review - ingenious sleight-of-handFriday, 02 October 2020![]() Like many musicians, Danny Driver had not given a recital since the pandemic took hold in March. His return to the platform took place in the intense spotlight of the Wigmore Hall, broadcast live in BBC Radio 3’s Lunchtime Concert and webcast to the... Read more... |
Viktoria Mullova, Misha Mullov-Abbado, Fidelio Orchestra Cafe review - a rainbow of brilliant artistryThursday, 01 October 2020![]() There should eventually be a plaque on the outside of the Fidelio Orchestra Café in Farringdon, to the effect that London’s musical life after lockdown re-ignited here. And how, in early July, with Steven Isserlis exuberantly stepping up to play... Read more... |
Bach’s The Art of Fugue, Angela Hewitt, Wigmore Hall – the many voices of humanityTuesday, 29 September 2020![]() How do they do it? Bach and Angela Hewitt, I mean, transfixing and focusing the audience in the Wigmore Hall – at home, too, hopefully, thanks to the livestreaming– through 13 and three-quarter fugues and four canons, all starting in the same key... Read more... |
Academy of St Martin in the Fields review - from solo meditations to collective celebrationsMonday, 28 September 2020![]() Clearly it takes peculiar circumstances for some of us to hear the Academy of St Martin in the Fields within its eponymous church – that’s a first for me. The lure was considerable. Quite apart from the relative dearth of live events in London, the... Read more... |
First Person: pianist Danny Driver on teaching online and the importance of music educationSaturday, 26 September 2020![]() There’s an old saying that goes: if life deals you lemons, make lemonade. To say that the COVID-19 pandemic is a lemon would be a huge and trivial understatement – it has had a massive effect on people’s way of life across the globe, it has cost... Read more... |
Classical CDs Weekly: Mahler, Shostakovich, Chris Watson and Georgia RodgersSaturday, 26 September 2020![]() Mahler: Symphony No. 7 Orchestre National de Lille/Alexandre Bloch (Alpha Classics)Mahler 5’s five movements trace a lucid journey from darkness to light, and No. 6’s tautly-structured outer movements don’t contain a wasted note. Whereas... Read more... |
Castalian Quartet/Elizabeth Llewellyn, Simon Lepper, Wigmore Hall review - out of this worldFriday, 25 September 2020![]() Songs of the beyond versus the profundity of the here and now struck very different depths in the Castalians’ evening concert at the Wigmore Hall and Elizabeth Llewellyn’s recital with equal partner Simon Lepper the following lunchtime. It was good... Read more... |
