thu 23/10/2025

Classical Reviews

Blaumane, Royal College of Music Symphony Orchestra, Jurowski, Royal College of Music

Geoff Brown

How do you solve a problem like Prokofiev? Not with a TV talent hunt promoted by Andrew Lloyd Webber. Not even, I’m beginning to think, with the current London Philharmonic concert series, Prokofiev: Man of the People?, devised by Vladimir Jurowski.

Read more...

Spence, London Symphony Orchestra, Adès, Barbican Hall

alexandra Coghlan

Last Tuesday night saw the London Symphony Orchestra celebrating 20th century English music under the baton of Antonio Pappano, launching proceedings with a stylish (and more than a little sexy) rendition of the dance suite from Thomas Adès’ Powder Her Face.

Read more...

Dido and Aeneas/ Actéon, Wigmore Hall

alexandra Coghlan

The Wigmore Hall staged its own Entente Cordiale last night with an operatic double bill bridging both sides of the Channel.

Read more...

2011: Reality 1, Art 0

Igor Toronyi-Lalic

We laughed. We cried. We cursed. We gulped. Not at fiction. But at fact. At the real world. The year's best theatre? Murdoch vs Watson. Thriller? The hunt for Osama. Horror?

Read more...

2011: From Russia - With Love?

Tom Birchenough

It took a relatively little-noticed television documentary, Vlad’s Army, broadcast in Channel 4’s Unreported World strand to confirm that theartsdesk has a readership in Russia. Peter Oborne’s film (the presenter pictured below) caught the pro-Kremlin youth movement, the Nashi, with its defences down, and the result depicted, no holds barred, how politics works there today.

Read more...

2011: Schoolroom Fairies and a Cross-Dressing Mezzo

David Nice

Two precisely imagined dream-visions bookend a cornucopia on the musical front. I’ll start with the deadly but save the apparently frivolous for the top slot. Christopher Alden’s pitiless exiling of Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream from Elizabethan wood to 1960s school block was to opera what Lars von Trier’s Melancholia was to film: audience-sundering, often alienating, sometimes enticing, but very much its own consistent world.

Read more...

2011: Welsh Warblers and Wagner Gone West

stephen Walsh

Living and working 150 miles from London, one either clutches at local straws or gets on a train. I’ve done both in 2011, as usual, but in a way the local is more stimulating, not because it’s better (ha!) but because there’s so much less of it. 

Read more...

2011: Beethoven, Bartók, and the Bard

alexandra Coghlan

Beethoven has been a real touchstone for classical music in the UK in 2011; flattening all in their way, the mighty Leipzig Gewandhaus and Riccardo Chailly delivered high-speed, high-risk thrills in their complete cycle of symphonies.

Read more...

The Bostridge Project: Ancient and Modern, Wigmore Hall

alexandra Coghlan

The poster boy for a generation of thinking, reading, researching soloists, tenor Ian Bostridge is a regular recitalist. But the programmes he has curated for the current Bostridge Project at the Wigmore Hall have given him the opportunity to show that there’s a lot more to his skills than just performance.

Read more...

BBC Symphony Orchestra, Saraste, Barbican Hall

David Nice

Is it ever a good idea to programme two symphonies by one composer in a single concert? Maverick Valery Gergiev is likely to stand alone in applying the rule to Mahler. Yet curiously his Prom marathon of two big instalments made more sense as stages on a journey than yoking together the outwardly less time-consuming symphonic adventures of Sibelius.

Read more...

Pages

latest in today

'We are bowled over!' Thank you for your messages... ...
The Mastermind review - another slim but nourishing slice of...

The clatter of cool jazz on the soundtrack announces writer-director Kelly Reichardt’s latest project, the kind of score that back in the day...

theartsdesk Q&A: Soft Cell

Seven years ago, Soft Cell were about to perform at a sold-out O2, a one-off event they entitled, after 16 years apart, One Night, One Final Time...

Little Brother, Soho Theatre review - light, bright but emot...

Niall is unwell. Very unwell. Very, very. There’s a lot going on in his head. He can’t really hold things together. Evidence? Well, he’s lost his...

Kilsby, Parkes, Sinfonia of London, Wilson, Barbican review...

It was guaranteed: string masterpieces by Vaughan Williams, Britten and Elgar would be played and conducted at the very highest level by John...

The Maids, Donmar Warehouse review - vibrant cast lost in a...

Jean Genet’s 1947 play has been quite a clothes-horse over the years, at times a glamorous confection dressed by designers, and...

The Diplomat, Season 3, Netflix review - Ambassador Kate Wyl...

The return of this entertaining political drama is always...

Gilbert & George, 21st Century Pictures, Hayward Gallery...

There was a time when Gilbert & George made provocative pictures that probed the body politic for sore points that others preferred to ignore...

Yazmin Lacey confirms her place in a vital soul movement wit...

We are in – it needs to be shouted from the rooftops every day – a golden age of British soul and jazz. It isn’t just about a few quality artists...