thu 30/03/2023

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Alexandra Coghlan
Thursday, 30 March 2023
Handel’s Theodora – voluptuously beautiful, warm-to-the-touch music, yoked to a libretto of chilly piety about Christian martyrdom in 4th-century Rome. It’s a red rag to directors...
Helen Hawkins
Thursday, 30 March 2023
Sierra Pettengill has made the politest angry film I have seen. It has an incendiary quality that comes precisely from its calm stance towards its material. This is a polemic, but...
Joe Muggs
Thursday, 30 March 2023
There’s something charmingly unassuming and humble about The Zombies. Nowadays their 1968 second album Odyssey and Oracle regularly figures in all time greatest albums lists, but...
Jenny Gilbert
Wednesday, 29 March 2023
With all the talk – and, frankly, fear – around AI and the increasing dominance of the digital world, it’s fascinating to see what dance has to say about it.Although...
Robert Beale
Wednesday, 29 March 2023
Mansfield Park was written to be a country house opera – that kind where you have a smallish number of performers, no chorus, and the “set” is simply the rooms and furnishings of...
Guy Oddy
Wednesday, 29 March 2023
1982 is only A Certain Ratio’s third album this century but it’s one that’s brimming with funky vibes that are more than enough to get anyone on their feet and dancing with a big...
Helen Hawkins
Tuesday, 28 March 2023
How much more is there left to be said about the excellence of Succession? It’s back for a final season, and devotees will...
Thomas H Green
Tuesday, 28 March 2023
As Inspiral Carpets play “She Comes in the Fall”, a great song and one of their signature tunes, its martial drumming drags...
Hannah Hutchings-Georgiou
Tuesday, 28 March 2023
“There is another world… a way of perceiving that is chaotic and awesome and terrifying,” announces Seraphina Madsen’s...
Saskia Baron
Tuesday, 28 March 2023
Last month’s Storyville: Sex on Screen (available on BBC iPlayer) was a slick, speedy (and repetitive) canter...
Helen Hawkins
Monday, 27 March 2023
There’s no point in being upset with the writer Steven Knight for doing what he usually does; even so, many viewers will...
David Nice
Monday, 27 March 2023
Is Korngold a second-rank composer with some first-rate ideas? Most performances of the 23-year-old Viennese prodigy's Die...
Bernard Hughes
Monday, 27 March 2023
Last night at the Barbican was my first experience of a film with live orchestra, which has become a big thing in the last...
Sarah Kent
Monday, 27 March 2023
“I believe Ayahuasca is something very deep,” says spiritual leader José López Sánchez in the documentary Antidote. “It...
Robert Beale
Monday, 27 March 2023
It was very much the formula as before, as Jean-Efflam Bavouzet and Gábor Takács-Nagy moved their edition of the Mozart...
Mark Kidel
Monday, 27 March 2023
This is an enchanting album which brings together four outstanding musicians, brilliant in their own right, but also adept...
Kieron Tyler
Sunday, 26 March 2023
From around July 1977, Jeremy Gluck began contributing to the UK music weekly Sounds. Amongst his pieces were features on...
Nick Hasted
Saturday, 25 March 2023
Francisca Alegría’s debut is an eco-fable about mourning and enduring love, for a mother and Mother Earth. We start by Chile...
Thomas H Green
Saturday, 25 March 2023
Welcome to the church of Mulvey. The sold-out venue is packed with a svelte crowd, mostly ranging in age between about 30...
 

★★★★★ AFTER IMPRESSIONISM, NATIONAL GALLERY An impressive tour de force

★★★★★ JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 4 Is this the El Cid of shoot-'em-up movies?

★★★ THE COW WHO SANG A SONG INTO THE FUTURE A sensually strange eco-fable

★★★★ SISSOKO SEGAL PARISIEN PEIRAN - LES EGARES Delicate musical conversations

★★★ THE DEAD CITY, ENGLISH NATIONAL OPERA Strong dream world, weak love story

★★★★ THINGS TO COME, LSO, STROBEL, BARBICAN 'Blissful' visions of the future

THE BARRACUDAS - DROP OUT WITH THE BARRACUDAS Garage-psych-punk-surf rockers

★★★ GREAT EXPECTATIONS, BBC ONE Modernised, muddied and muddled

disc of the day

Album: The Zombies - Different Game

Rock as comforting as an old pair of slippers, in the best possible way

tv

Succession, Season Four, Sky Atlantic review - powerful beginning for the endgame

Patriarch vs pretenders: a primal story that's never been more compellingly told

Great Expectations, BBC One review - modernised, muddied and muddled

Steven Knight gives the Dickens classic a Peaky Blinders feel

film

Riotsville USA review - a training scheme with a tragic legacy

How the Johnson administration turned US cops into riot police

Blu-ray: Kamikaze Hearts

Provocative 1986 docudrama about the adult entertainment industry

new music

Album: The Zombies - Different Game

Rock as comforting as an old pair of slippers, in the best possible way

Album: A Certain Ratio - 1982

Post-punk veterans’ build on their funky resurgence

Inspiral Carpets, Concorde 2, Brighton review - a raucous catalogue of Madchester-era hits

Despite being hampered by a muddy sound the Nineties veterans deliver a solidly entertaining set

opera

Theodora, Arcangelo, Cohen, Barbican review - gloriously dark and sober

A chilly story gains plenty of human warmth in this vivid account

Mansfield Park, RNCM, Manchester review - bringing out the best

Costume drama in music, with a bit of a surprise

The Dead City, English National Opera review - strong dream world, weak love story

Taxing lead roles bravely taken, but Korngold's life-over-death dynamic doesn't quite work

theatre

Black Superhero, Royal Court review - ambitious, but messy
Debut play about sex, race and queerness is a disappointing mishmash
Dance of Death, National Theatre of Norway, Coronet Theatre review - straight for the jugular
White-heat Strindberg from Norwegian actors undeterred by technical hitches
The Way Old Friends Do, Park Theatre review - sweet, but flimsy
Mark Gatiss and Ian Hallard’s ABBA tribute is fun, but clunky

dance

Tom Dale Company, The Place review - immersive and genre-busting

Dazzling, ingenious, thought provoking - a big thumbs-up to the digital revolution

'You want to cry from loving to do it so much' - Lynn Seymour 1939-2023

Remembering the unique ballerina who injected me with her poison

Turn It Out with Tiler Peck, Sadler's Wells review - America's ballet wonder-woman raises the barre

On her UK solo debut, New York City Ballet’s queen of speed gives audiences a wild ride

Books

Seraphina Madsen: Aurora review - the tarot won’t save us

Homage to the history of the dark arts and the witchy women who realised them

Margaret Atwood: Old Babes in the Wood review - bookending the short story

Semi-autobiographical tales of loss and love sit oddly among snails and aliens

latest comments

What a wonderful dancer/actress she was! She...

Not a single song out of the 40 is mentioned....

I'm no great U2 fan but they deserve better than...

This is a pathetic display. I would think the...

I also loved the way that the “who are the real...

Seymour's silent scream of pain in The Invitation...

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