17th century
L'Arpeggiata, Wigmore HallSaturday, 22 March 2014![]() Turning every concert into a party, baroque ensemble L’Arpeggiata are performers in the truest sense. Too often early musicians get away with being shy or downright awkward, visibly uncomfortable when forced to introduce an encore. Not so with these... Read more... |
The Knight of the Burning Pestle, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseFriday, 28 February 2014![]() If it's possible to have rather too much of a frolicsome thing, consider by way of example The Knight of the Burning Pestle, a giddily self-conscious 1607 romp from Francis Beaumont that would be more fun if it were at least a full scene or two... Read more... |
The Fairy Queen, Bury Court OperaTuesday, 25 February 2014![]() Bury Court Opera acquired a pearl of great price when it persuaded Simon Over, music director of the Southbank Sinfonia and the Parliament Choir, to bring his 2010 production of Dido and Aeneas from Anghiari in Tuscany to perform in the beautifully... Read more... |
The Musketeers, BBC OneSunday, 19 January 2014![]() It’s costume drama meets adventure story, it’s got smouldering manhood and heaving-bosomed women with sex, swordfights, politicking and even beautifully lit Prague doubling for 17th-century Paris, but the question hanging over the BBC’s lavish new... Read more... |
Yuletide Scenes 1: A Scene on the Ice near a TownThursday, 19 December 2013![]() The term “snow day” may have been coined with the most recent spate of cold winters in mind, encapsulating the modern-day, not to mention British, consequences of winter weather, but Hendrick Avercamp’s Seventeenth-century “snow day”, painted in... Read more... |
The Orgelbüchlein Project, Chapel Royal of St Peter ad VinculaSunday, 08 December 2013![]() It was a bright idea which, thanks to careful programming, has delivered – among other special events – two rich concerts in the Tower of London’s unexpectedly welcoming Tudor church, courtesy of the enterprising Spitalfields Music Winter Festival.... Read more... |
The Anatomy of Melancholy, OvalhouseThursday, 28 November 2013![]() The Anatomy of Melancholy (or to give it its full title - The Anatomy of Melancholy, What it is: With all the Kinds, Causes, Symptomes, Prognostickes, and Several Cures of it. In Three Maine Partitions with their several Sections, Members, and... Read more... |
DVD: Schalcken the PainterMonday, 28 October 2013![]() Schalcken the Painter looks like a documentary shot inside a Dutch Golden Age painting, out of whose black depths the Devil one day materialises. Taking the truly ghastly guise of the invincibly wealthy merchant Vanderhausen (John Justin), he buys... Read more... |
Jason/Agrippina, English Touring OperaWednesday, 09 October 2013![]() English Touring Opera has form when it comes to baroque opera. Handelfest in 2009 marked the composer’s 250th anniversary with a sequence of excellent stagings, while 2010’s The Duenna was a riotous and irreverent musical delight, and there was an... Read more... |
Gabriel, Shakespeare's GlobeSunday, 21 July 2013![]() If there’s a more thinly written, loosely structured and hammily acted play than Samuel Adamson’s panorama of Purcell’s London, then I have yet to endure it. Baffling, because this is the writer who brought us Southwark Fair, a lively depiction of... Read more... |
CD: Darren Hayman & the Short Parliament – BugbearsThursday, 04 July 2013![]() Darren Hayman isn’t a chap who stands still. The former Herfner frontman’s last-but-one album, Lido, was a series of mood-music compositions inspired by open-air swimming pools. In 2011 came The Ship’s Piano, a collection of piano pieces. Rather... Read more... |
Vermeer & Music: The Art of Love and Leisure, National GalleryWednesday, 03 July 2013![]() Music and art have been intertwined for millennia, the static, frozen and soundless moment of paint capturing the feeling and the meaning of ephemeral time-based music. And nowhere can the act of making music have so thoroughly infiltrated a society... Read more... |
