Classical music
Robert Beale
Of all the inventive and enterprising things Manchester Collective do, it’s most often been the playing of a string ensemble led from first desk by Rakhi Singh that’s been the most fundamentally rewarding.Last night’s concert was further confirmation of that. The formula for other outfits to introduce new music has often been three (or four) standards, with one novelty sandwiched in, on the spoonful-of-sugar principle. The Collective do it differently: they give you three or four novelties, with one standard inserted for recognizability. And in this case the standard (Tchaikovsky’s Serenade Read more ...
Robert Beale
Two splendid pieces of orchestral virtuosity began and finished the second Saturday concert by the BBC Philharmonic under John Storgårds at the Bridgewater Hall. It was given the title of “Mischief and Magic”, an apt summary.For mischief we had Richard Strauss’s Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks, perhaps the most perfect of his orchestral tone poems in that it not only tells a story but is beautifully shaped and balanced as an extended classical rondo.The episodes were given their folklore-based descriptions by Strauss (“Through the market he rides”, “Dressed as a priest he oozes unction”, “ Read more ...
Robert Hollingworth
I’m sitting in a café in Kraców, Poland, rehearsals finished for the resurrection of a mass setting written nearly 400 years ago in Rome. Nothing particularly odd about this except that the virtually unknown composer – Orazio Benevoli, master of the Colossal Baroque – split his choir into four separate groups and wrote them a kind of sonic doubles match, the music jumping from choir to choir around the heads of the listener until it comes together in life-affirming surround-sound cadences that allow you to experience something brilliant but ephemeral - and quite indescribable: in 17th century Read more ...
Boyd Tonkin
“Bold, ambitious, and good for the sector.” So said Charlotte Moore, the BBC chief content officer, who currently earns £468,000, in March last year as she defended plans to close the BBC Singers as part of a package of swingeing musical cuts masked – as usual – as a high-principled strategic rethink.Well, what a difference a year, or rather 18 months, makes. Last night, the world’s first permanent radio choir celebrated its centenary – the “Wireless Choir” began to broadcast from Savoy Hill on 2 October 1924 – at a packed Barbican Hall. It greeted the great survivors’ arrival with the Read more ...
David Nice
Wonders never ceased in Elisabeth Leonskaja’s return to the Wigmore Hall. Not only did she play Schubert’s last three sonatas with all repeats and the full range of a unique power undiminished in a 78-year old alongside a never too overstated pathos, radiance and delicacy; just before receiving the Wigmore Hall Medal (presentation by John Gilhooly pictured below), she also gave us more revelations in the compressed world of Schoenberg’s Six Little Pieces, Op. 19.Only this pianist could possibly follow Pavel Kolesnikov's revelatory take on Schubert's crowning glory, the B flat Sonata D960 the Read more ...
David Nice
If there was ever a time for the inevitable "Rach Three” (piano concerto, not symphony) in the composer’s 150th anniversary year – and I confess I dodged other occasions – it might as well have come in the fresh and racy shape of Leif Ove Andsnes' interpretation and the equally alert, forward-moving playing of the London Philharmonic Orchestra under a kindred spirit, its principal conductor Edward Gardner.In short, there was no slack either in the concerto or an even greater masterpiece, the Choral Symphony The Bells, and yet no lack of emotional intensity either. Andsnes is usually Read more ...
graham.rickson
 Joan Sutherland: The Complete Decca Recordings – Recitals & Oratorios (Decca)The voice of La Stupenda must have been the most recorded in history, given Decca’s lavish heyday (La Divina, Callas, just missed EMI's stereo best). Even before we get to the two boxes of complete operas, with no release date in sight, the recital and oratorio set numbers 37 CDs. And they really do run a surprising gamut. The earliest is the least typical, Bliss’s A Song of Farewell in 1954; a year later, Sutherland would be the first Jenifer in Tippett’s The Midsummer Marriage. The famous Royal Opera Read more ...
Boyd Tonkin
This autumn, the Philharmonia’s “Nordic Soundscapes” season promises music suffused with the epic vistas, and weather, of high latitudes, along with reflections on the climate crisis as it threatens the traditional bonds between nature and culture. So far, so piously programmatic. But what difference can such a high-minded schema make to the music made by the orchestra’s outdoorsy Finnish maestro, Santtu-Mathias Rouvali, and his colleagues? On last night’s evidence from the Royal Festival Hall, enough to refresh and reframe the works they play. In particular, Sir Stephen Hough’s bracing Read more ...
Robert Beale
If audience reaction is anything to go by, Kahchun Wong’s season-opening first concert officially in post as principal conductor of the Hallé was an outstanding success.And the reception was deserved. Still young enough, with a mop of hair cascading over his forehead, to look like a Wunderkind, he has considerable experience behind him, with a career on both sides of the world – in south-east Asia and in Europe and America.That particular characteristic was symbolized in this programme. He has an interest in Britten’s music, and already he and the Hallé have recorded the complete score of The Read more ...
Rachel Halliburton
Three years after Through the Noise’s first experimental “noisenight” at the Hoxton Underbelly, they are expanding into an international organisation with concerts scheduled for Paris and Brussels this season. Their drive to bring world-class musicians to grassroots venues continues to attract some of classical music’s most galvanising talents; Pavel Kolesnikov, Sheku Kanneh-Mason and classical guitarist Alexandra Whittingham remain among their regular performers.This week they celebrated a double first – the first time American composer and pianist Natalie Tenenbaum has played in the UK, and Read more ...
Bernard Hughes
If Angela Hewitt’s recital last night at the Wigmore Hall was a meal, it would have been two light, fresh – but nourishing – courses, followed by a big suetty pudding, splendidly cooked but sitting slightly heavy on the stomach. The delightful openers were a sequence of Scarlatti sonatas and a Bach partita, the afters a large portion of Brahms that, for me, sits in the “admire rather than love” category.I do, though, love the Scarlatti sonatas, and one of the beauties of them is that you can be familiar with loads – but know there are always still more to discover. He wrote 555 of them, which Read more ...
David Nice
All five finalists in the Leeds International Piano Competition, at which Pavel Kolesnikov was one of the jurors, should have been given tickets, transport and accommodation to hear his Wigmore recital the evening after the prizegiving. Not that supreme imagination can be taught, but to witness the degree of physical ease (and freeflowing concert wear) that allows all the miracles to happen would be a good lesson to so many tension-racked pianists, including some of Kolesnikov’s peers.As always, the connections he made in his programme were surprising, though obvious once you thought about it Read more ...