tue 26/08/2025

Classical Reviews

An Anatomy of Melancholy, Barbican Pit review - stunning journey into an Elizabethan heart of darkness

Rachel Halliburton

We enter the Barbican Pit as if visiting an apothecary. On the walls of the passage approaching it there are scientific diagrams and documents, while the stage itself is set up with glass cases filled with different potions and experiments.

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Australian Chamber Orchestra, Tognetti, Milton Court review - from Beethoven to didgeridoo

Bernard Hughes

I’ve not heard a didgeridoo in concert before so was grateful to the Australian Chamber Orchestra for giving me the opportunity, as part of a busy programme at Milton Court last night.

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Orfeo ed Euridice, Opera North review - more than a concert

Robert Beale

Though billed as a “concert performance”, this was really much more than that. With the resources of their own theatre, Opera North’s team present a staging that employs a big, built-up and raked floor, with a simple platform in the centre and a starry-night black back-cloth, and their principals and chorus move and act in simple but effective style.

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Mulroy, Aurora Orchestra, Kings Place review - old and new worlds of song

Boyd Tonkin

You invariably come away from an Aurora Orchestra concert with ears refreshed and mind revived. As a storm swept across London on Sunday, the audience at Kings Place enjoyed their own cleansing wind in the form of this genre-spanning gig in the “Voices Unwrapped” season, led by tenor Nicholas Mulroy. It took us all the way from Baroque Europe to the socially-committed “new song” movements of modern Latin America. 

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Path of Miracles, Tenebrae, Short, St Martin-in-the-Fields review - a modern choral classic

Bernard Hughes

This is the third time I’ve heard Path of Miracles live this year and I’d happily hear it another three times before Christmas. I reviewed the amateur Elysian Singers sing it in February, and the BBC Singers took it on for the first time in May – but last night’s triumphant version by Tenebrae was surely the best of the lot.

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Ax, LPO, Canellakis, RFH review - from the soil to the stars

Boyd Tonkin

Good conductors should surely be seen as well as heard.

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Vaughan Williams Anniversary Concert, Wigmore Hall review - choices, choices

David Nice

A 150th birthday cornucopia was anticipated: vintage chamber and vocal Vaughan Williams in a big Wigmore Hall three-parter alongside music by other great Brits. It turned out, instead, to be a handsome if overlarge horn sounding several cracked notes.

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Orpheus, Opera North review - cross-cultural opera in action

Robert Beale

Within its own aspirations, Orpheus is a complete triumph. “Monteverdi reimagined”, as Opera North subtitled it from the start, is an attempt to unite (and contrast, and compare, and cross-fertilise) early baroque opera with South Asian classical music.

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Esfahani, RSNO, Søndergård, Usher Hall, Edinburgh review - music meets machine

Christopher Lambton

This was one of those rare occasions when a somewhat diverse collection of pieces knits together into a rather satisfying programme. To start at the end, the Saint-Saëns “Organ” Symphony is a rumbustious crowd pleaser not least because of its theatrical appeal: the lone organist sitting way above the orchestra unleashing the final peroration in a great surge of full-fat romantic harmony.

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Total Immersion: Sibelius the Storyteller, Barbican review - a feast of sagas and psychic masterpieces

David Nice

If there’s a dud or a dullard among Sibelius’s 116 official opus numbers, I haven’t heard it. Yet catching even many of the outright masterpieces live in concert isn’t easy; the brevity that can show us a world in under 10 minutes makes some difficult to programme.

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