Hungary
BBC Proms: Bavouzet, London Philharmonic Orchestra, JurowskiWednesday, 27 July 2011The world tour that the Proms offer this year touches down in no more fascinating musical country than Hungary, with three of its great composers, Liszt, Bartók and Kodály brought into the Albert Hall last night by the ever-stimulating Vladimir... Read more... |
Eyewitness: Hungarian Photography in the 20th Century, Royal AcademyThursday, 30 June 2011A subtly haunting and brilliantly composed photograph by André Kertész lives on as a wistfully memorable image of exile: in Lost Cloud, 1937, a small, isolated cloud drifts we know not where next to a New York skyscraper. Kertész is one of the... Read more... |
The teenage Liszt's song for EuropeTuesday, 10 May 2011For last year's Europe Day concert, presidency-holder Spain fielded a Paco Peña showstopper in what's for the past three years been the venue of choice, St John's, Smith Square. This 9 May, the Hungarians' six-month stint yielded not a wow-factor... Read more... |
Evgeny Kissin, Barbican HallMonday, 14 February 2011Word was that four strings had broken in rehearsals. One had snapped only half an hour before the start of last night's Liszt-fest at the Barbican. It meant one of two things: either pianist Evgeny Kissin had finally switched off the safety-first... Read more... |
LPO, Jurowski, Royal Festival HallSunday, 30 January 2011It was with Mahler’s Opus 1 – folkloric cantata Das klagende lied – that Vladimir Jurowski so memorably launched his role as the LPO’s principal conductor, and it was to this work that he returned last night. Four years on and he asked his audience... Read more... |
Markovich, LPO, Jurowski, Royal Festival HallWednesday, 26 January 2011The great thing about the paucity of Mahler compositions is that, when anniversary time comes, his late-Romantic buddies get to join in. And some of them, like Alexander Zemlinsky in his ravishing Lyric Symphony - being given a rare outing by the... Read more... |
Hough, Budapest Festival Orchestra, Fischer, Royal Festival HallMonday, 17 January 2011Who knew the changeover of the EU Presidency could be this much fun? Amid the formal bowing and scraping at the Royal Festival Hall bunfights last night that signalled that the Hungarians were now at the tiller of this sinking political ship were... Read more... |
Kafka Fragments, Barbican HallFriday, 12 November 2010A 70-minute song cycle for soprano and violin, the Kafka Fragments is the magnum opus (the irony of its miniature forms seems entirely deliberate) of György Kurtág, a composer known for the inscrutability of his music. His lines arrive at the ears... Read more... |
Treasures from Budapest: European Masterpieces from Leonardo to Schiele, Royal AcademyMonday, 27 September 2010Treasures from Budapest – phew! It’s overwhelming. One staggers out quite cross-eyed and wobbly-kneed. There are over 200 works, for heaven’s sake. And so many Virgins: sweet-faced Italian Madonnas, austere Eastern European Madonnas, pallid German... Read more... |
My Summer Reading: Author Tibor FischerMonday, 06 September 2010Born in Stockport in 1959, Tibor Fischer is the son of two Hungarian basketball players who fled their homeland during the 1956 revolution; his 1992 Booker-nominated debut novel, Under the Frog, revisited this subject in wonderfully fleshy, blackly... Read more... |
Mayerling, Royal BalletWednesday, 07 October 2009Last night was Sun night at the Royal Opera House, when the opening night of the ballet season was supposedly entirely attended by winners of The Sun’s ballet-ballot. Sadly the production, Mayerling, came into the ballot too late to get the full Sun... Read more... |
Le Grand Macabre, ENOFriday, 18 September 2009Door-sized detachable nipples, an angel of death with a dick to die for (literally), a cave of an arse housing a disco-dancing unit of storm troopers and an all-singing all-dancing couple of randy cadavers. Ever wondered what the Europeans might... Read more... |
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