wed 14/05/2025

Rachmaninov

Classical CDs Weekly: Boyle, Martin, Rachmaninov

Antonio Pappano delivers satisfying richness and brooding intensity

This Saturday we’ve a new recording of a famous Russian symphony played by an Italian orchestra under their London-based principal conductor. There’s a rare Shakespearean opera written in the 1950s by a Swiss master using a German text. And a...

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BBC Symphony Orchestra, Bychkov, Barbican Hall

What is it about Rachmaninov's ghost-train masterpiece The Bells and death? The BBC Symphony Orchestra last played it under the great Russian conductor Yevgeny Svetlanov, who used it as a valedictory gesture knowing he had only weeks to live....

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Rhapsody/ Sensorium/ 'Still Life' at the Penguin Café, Royal Ballet

For those in the know, Sergei Polunin has been marked out as “the one to watch” from his schooldays. Since he won the Prix de Lausanne in 2006 and joined the Royal Ballet the following year, he has been “the next big thing”. Well, I’m here to tell...

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Faust, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Yamada, Barbican Hall

It's rare for demanding though not, I think, unduly cynical orchestral musicians to wax unanimously lyrical about a new conducting kid on the block. But that's what happened at the 2009 Besançon International Conducting Competition when BBC Symphony...

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Classical CDs Round-Up 16

Geneviève Laurenceau plays Prokofiev's Violin Concerto No 2 in our CD of the Month

This month’s selection includes historical recordings by a neglected violinist and interesting interpretations of Brahms and Mahler. A notorious choral blockbuster works its insidious magic, and Australia’s best-known classical musician takes on...

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Classical CDs Round-Up 15

Howard Skempton's 'Bolt from the Blue' is radically simple but never simplistic

This month’s carefully sifted new releases include some quirky Americana and a piano filled with ping-pong balls. A Baroque specialist plays some ripe orchestral transcriptions and a neglected cello concerto gets a new ending. Six Danish symphonies...

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Classical CDs Round-Up 13

'I had to cut the viola d’amore, but it was awful': Janáček's Intimate Letters quartet is restored to its original instrumentation in a new recording

This month’s releases include two contrasted crossover discs, one in tribute to Armenian Orthodox church music, the other by, er, Phil Collins-era Genesis. There’s an Elgar oratorio, and a disc of choral music inspired by the untimely death of a...

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Lugansky, Russian National Orchestra, Boreyko, Royal Albert Hall

Russians can often get away with murder in concert. It's so ingrained within our Western psyche to believe that the Slav has culture, musicality, an innate aesthetic sensitivity pouring out of every toe that you could get a Russian to do the chicken...

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The BBC's new TV dawn for the Proms

Paul Lewis, Beethoven specialist and pioneering subject of the Q-Ball camera

For the couch-bound classical music lover, keeping up with the Proms is pretty straightforward. Step one: open bottle of agreeable claret. Step two: turn on Radio 3 and listen, or watch selected Proms on BBC Two or BBC Four. Or, indeed, catch up...

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Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Petrenko, Royal Albert Hall

Hats off, gentlemen: a thoroughly enjoyable banquet of Romanticism from Petrenko and the RLPO

What a thrilling sound the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra can make when it chooses! What a grippingly deep tone, from a lower strings section that sounds like you’ve got the bass on your car stereo turned up daringly high, what clinical...

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London Symphony Orchestra, Pappano, Barbican Hall

Antonio Pappano: the Royal Opera's dynamic Music Director ventures Stateside

It didn’t take long for memories of Anatoly Liadov’s The Enchanted Lake to fade in the dramatic shift Stateside which dominated Antonio Pappano’s latest outing with the London Symphony Orchestra. Every tone fleetingly shimmered as Liadov’s dreamy...

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Classical Music CDs Round-Up 6

Leonard Bernstein latest complete Mahler is released this month: the conductor 'clearly loved Mahler nearly to death'

This month’s reviews have a heavy late-romantic bias: chamber music by Dvořák, fascinating and idiosyncratic Mahler from Bernstein and Tennstedt, and some superb recordings of Bruckner, Sibelius and Rachmaninov (or Rachmaninoff, as Gianandrea Noseda...

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