sat 11/01/2020

theartsdesk com, first with arts reviews, news and interviews

Graham Rickson
Saturday, 11 January 2020
Beethoven: Symphonies 1-9 Danish Chamber Orchestra/Ádám Fischer (Naxos)“I need to play the notes in such a way that we can recreate the feelings of the listeners which Beethoven...
Kieron Tyler
Saturday, 11 January 2020
“Only in a Man’s World” is a snappy pop-funk nugget with an Eighties feel. There’s a kinship with Peter Gabriel and “Once in a Lifetime” Talking Heads. Its lyrics though are...
Markie Robson-Scott
Friday, 10 January 2020
An idyllic Scottish classroom full of happy children making sponge paintings of flowers with two enthusiastic young teachers – clearly, doom is in the air. Here comes that sense...
Boyd Tonkin
Friday, 10 January 2020
Alina Ibragimova’s solo journey (in 2015) through the peaks and abysses of Bach’s Sonatas and Partitas gave me vivid Proms memories to treasure for a lifetime. The Russian-born...
Saskia Baron
Friday, 10 January 2020
The Safdie brothers, Josh and Benny, once programmed a season of films entitled Emotional Sloppy Manic Cinema, and if sloppy is subtracted from that description, it’s a pretty...
Jenny Gilbert
Friday, 10 January 2020
It’s unlikely that Lord Byron would recognise much about Le Corsaire. Beyond the characters’ names and the Ottoman location, there is little trace of the 1814 bestselling verse-...
David Nice
Friday, 10 January 2020
Assuming the world holds together that long, there will be something we can rely on annually all the way to 2041, the 250th...
Joseph Walsh
Friday, 10 January 2020
It’s 1968, and Seberg leaves her husband, Romain Gary (Yvan Attal) and son, Alexandre (Gabriel Sky) for an audition in...
Veronica Lee
Friday, 10 January 2020
Mischief Theatre's “Goes Wrong” oeuvre is now well established: broad humour combined with physical comedy and slapstick...
Thomas H Green
Friday, 10 January 2020
18 years ago, Electric Soft Parade, centred around brothers Alex and Thomas White, were the latest hyped hope of indie kids...
Demetrios Matheou
Thursday, 09 January 2020
The greatest war films are those which capture the terrifying physical and psychological ordeal that soldiers face, along...
David Nice
Thursday, 09 January 2020
The devil wore all manner of outlandish attire in last night's chameleonic programme devised by Peter Ash, the London...
Owen Richards
Thursday, 09 January 2020
Oh how British indies love a road trip. Trekking across the rugged landscape, meeting a colourful cast of characters,...
Veronica Lee
Thursday, 09 January 2020
It's the smallest lies that can bring you down. When he is asked by a detective how he got on with his family, who have just...
Helen Wallace
Wednesday, 08 January 2020
When I mention Nature Unwrapped, a year-long series at Kings Place subtitled "Sounds of Life", the responses are often...
Adam Sweeting
Wednesday, 08 January 2020
It happened 42 years ago, but the mass suicide of 900 people at the Jonestown settlement in Guyana is still an event that...
Laura De Lisle
Wednesday, 08 January 2020
The Tyler sisters start as they mean to go on: bickering. Middle sister Gail (Bryony Hannah) has come home from uni to find...
Adam Sweeting
Wednesday, 08 January 2020
Series about fishing have become a durable mini-genre, including the likes of Deadliest Catch and Saltwater Heroes. However...
Jo Southerd
Wednesday, 08 January 2020
In 2019, music kept its place as a vital means for expression and escapism in an increasingly troubled and troubling world....
 

★★★★ SUZMAN, LONDON SCHOOLS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, EDWARDS, BARBICAN A cabaret from hell

★★★★ THE TYLER SISTERS, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE DOWNSTAIRS Raucous celebration of sisterhood

★★★★ WHITE HOUSE FARM, ITV Gripping opener of true crime drama

★★★★ THE RUNAWAYS Charming British flick carried by three children's bravura performances

★★★★ CORNWALL: THIS FISHING LIFE, BBC TWO A precarious trade on the ocean wave

★★★★★ ALBUMS OF THE YEAR 2019: Little Simz - GREY Area

disc of the day

Album: Field Music - Making a New World

Audacious concept album examining the still-extant ripples of World War One

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tv

Deadwater Fell, Channel 4 review - dark murder mystery in a Scottish village

Just what the doctor ordered? David Tennant as a GP under suspicion in a gripping first episode

White House Farm, ITV review - gripping opener of true crime drama

Freddie Fox is excellent as murderer Jeremy Bamber

Jonestown: Terror in the Jungle, BBC Four review - meticulous account of a haunting American tragedy

How deranged cult leader Jim Jones led his Peoples Temple to the slaughter

film

Uncut Gems review - relentless tale of gambling and the diamond trade

Adrenaline fuelled portrait of a gambler running out of luck

Seberg review - lightweight script, heavyweight performance

Kristen Stewart dazzles in this glitzy, puddle-deep account of Jean Seberg

1917 review – immersive, exemplary war film

Sam Mendes makes his most personal film to date – and one of his most accomplished

new music

Album: Field Music - Making a New World

Audacious concept album examining the still-extant ripples of World War One

Album: Electric Soft Parade - Stages

Brighton indie-psyche stalwarts offer a luscious, heart-rending exploration of grief

Albums of the Year 2019: Little Simz - GREY Area

Records to return to again and again, from a year better left behind

classical

Classical CDs and Vinyl Weekly: Beethoven, Holst

Symphonies and concertos from this year's birthday boy, and a British orchestral classic gets a spectacular airing

Ibragimova, LSO, Stutzmann, Barbican review – grace and gravity

Memorable Mendelssohn, bookended by hearty but classy Brahms and Wagner

Clarke, Ränzlöv, The Mozartists, Page, Wigmore Hall - young Mozart among the giants

1770 is this year's focus in 'Mozart 250,' showcasing two bright young singers

opera

Best of 2019: Opera

Haunted-ballroom Shostakovich and high jinks in Royal Albert Hall Berlioz top the bill

Peter Grimes, Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Gardner, RFH review - more instrumental than vocal intensity

Superlative playing and conducting, some fine singing, but the protagonist is a bit peaky

theartsdesk Q&A: Director Sir Jonathan Miller

The legendary director lets rip

theatre

Magic Goes Wrong, Vaudeville Theatre review - entertaining spoof
Mischief Theatre and Penn & Teller mash-up
The Tyler Sisters, Hampstead Theatre Downstairs review – raucous celebration of sisterhood
Quick-witted new play tackles a sibling bond in snapshots over 40 years
Celebrating the musicals of Jerry Herman (1931-2019)
An immortal lyricist and composer leaves us plenty to be joyful about

dance

Le Corsaire, London Coliseum review - hugely entertaining

Don't mind the plot. ENB dance up a storm in this exuberant pirate caper

Best of 2019: Dance

In a year dominated by big names and big companies, delights were found off-piste

The Red Shoes, Sadler's Wells review - the ultimate stage movie

Matthew Bourne's love letter to the cinema returns, in even sharper focus

comedy

Best of 2019: Comedy

My (mostly) highs and (a few) lows

Adam Kay, Bloomsbury Theatre review - festive tales from the NHS coalface

Medic-turned-comic reads from his waspish memoir

gaming

Rage 2 review – garish but great post-apocalyptic shooter

Challenge The Authority in this 'Mad Max on mushrooms' renegade romp

Win a Luxury Weekend for Two to Celebrate Brighton Festival!

An eclectic line-up spanning music, theatre, dance, visual art, film, comedy, literature and spoken word could be yours with boutique hotel and exquisite meals included

World War Z review - bloodthirsty fun with the zombie apocalypse

Chainsawing the brain-eaters as you battle against the tide of the undead

visual arts

Best of 2019: Visual Arts

The exhibitions we loved most over the past 12 months

Caravaggio & Bernini, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna - high emotion in 17th century Rome

Painting and sculpture vie for supremacy in the eternal city

Dora Maar, Tate Modern review - how women disappear

Stunning photographs and fabulous photomontages by overlooked and elusive artist

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