tue 10/06/2025

BBCSO

BBC Proms: Tetzlaff, BBCSO, Robertson

I’ve noted before the lingering John Wilson effect on the BBC Symphony Orchestra, whereby that pioneer of Hollywood-style authenticity always leaves the strings especially who play for him in good, vibrato-drenched shape for late-Romantic music....

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BBC Proms: Ma, BBCSO, Robertson

Yo-Yo Ma: the consummate performer, bringing virtuosity to absolute simplicity

Over the past six weeks of the Proms the BBC’s hard-working Symphony Orchestra has performed everything from Britten to Brahms, Verdi to Volans. Their Mahler with Ed Gardner was an operatic epic, their programme of English music for Mark...

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BBC Proms: Douglas, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Dausgaard

Thomas Dausgaard: a febrile, fluent presence striking his own path through Wagner and Brahms

Having been away in remote mountain places, I hadn't heard that the BBCSO's chief conductor Jiří Bělohlávek was taking a month off to recover from a virus. So it was a bracing last-minute shock to find the man stepping up to the podium to conduct...

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Classical CDs Weekly: Martinů, Muhly, ELF

Belohlávek: matchless in Martinu

A young American composer's work is showcased by a major label and doesn't disappoint. A classy British horn player enjoys teaming up with a pianist and a flautist. And an impressive cycle of 20th-century symphonies gets a welcome airing, thanks to...

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BBC Proms: BBCSO, BBCSC, BBC Singers, Wigglesworth

To lose one performer (to misquote Oscar Wilde) may be regarded as a misfortune, to lose three begins to look like carelessness. With last night’s Prom killing off soloists faster than you can say Sinfonia da Requiem there are few who wouldn’t have...

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BBC Proms: Verdi's Requiem, BBCSO, Bychkov

You can't say this about many works but Verdi's Requiem really is as snug as a bug in a rug in the Royal Albert Hall. In which other space could the three moon-like bass drums orbiting the back of the orchestra not look ridiculous? Last night's...

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First Night of the 2011 Proms

Here we are again. Marvel as you enter at the aptly gaudy lighting of Albert's colosseum, but know that unless your place is with the Prommers towards the front of the arena, the musicians will often sound as if they're in another galaxy - maybe one...

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Light Fantastic, BBCSO, Wilson, Royal Festival Hall/BBC Radio 3

John Wilson: Taking light music to the highest level

If Eric Coates’s Knightsbridge March is good enough for Gergiev, who conducted it as a saving-grace encore of a very messy World Orchestra for Peace Prom in 2005 (17 orchestral leaders in the first violins, not a happy gambit), then it’s certainly...

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BBC Symphony Orchestra, Renes, Spitalfields Music

Everyone in the BBCSO is a potential soloist. I know this because the course I run at the City Literary Institute linked to the orchestra has welcomed principals, duos, two string quartets and three viola foursomes (proving that department the most...

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The Bartered Bride, BBCSO, Bělohlávek, Barbican Hall

What a relief, for half of last night's semi-staged concert performance, to have left behind Britten's claustrophobic wood at English National Opera and to seek refuge in Smetana's Bohemian village inn of good cheer. Czech music's national comic...

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Reverberations: The Influence of Steve Reich, Barbican

Sometimes you can leave a concert feeling slightly shortchanged: a perceived weakness in the programming; an unprepared, lacklustre conductor; a phoned-in performance. No danger of any of the above at the marathon session three of Reverberations, a...

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Unsuk Chin Day, Barbican

Some of the most exciting Western classical music being composed today comes from the Far East. Composers from Japan and South Korea - possibly because they find themselves in a different intellectual cycle to us in the West - seem to be able to do...

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