Classical music
St Matthew Passion, Irish Baroque Orchestra, Whelan, St Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin review - fluency, fire and some jaw-dropping solosSaturday, 02 March 2024![]() After last year’s small-scale, big-impact Messiah in the Wigmore Hall, superlatives are again in order for the IBO’s performance of the greatest musical offering known to humankind. With the fluency established by that most supple of directors Peter... Read more... |
First Person: violinist Tom Greed on breaking down barriers in the presentation of chamber musicSaturday, 02 March 2024![]() For musicians, the period from early 2020 to mid-2021 was one of great reflection, with so many questions to puzzle over. Could we satisfy the basic need to interact with others and express ourselves? What on earth was Zoom, and how, as performers,... Read more... |
Classical CDs: Toccatas, taxi horns and tortoisesSaturday, 02 March 2024![]() William Steinberg: Complete Command Classics Recordings (DG)It’s hard to find a bad word said against conductor William Steinberg, cited by one critic as combining the best attributes of Toscanini and Klemperer. Born in Cologne in 1899,... Read more... |
Hallé, Elder, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review - Bruckner is backFriday, 01 March 2024![]() Sir Mark Elder conducted Bruckner’s Symphony No. 8 for his first time in last night’s Hallé series concert, a reflection of his untiring exploration of new territory even as he nears the end of his time as the orchestra’s music director.So this was... Read more... |
Colin Currie Quartet, Wigmore Hall review - toccatas for triangles and teacupsWednesday, 28 February 2024![]() I have never seen the Wigmore Hall stage more crammed with instruments than for this Colin Currie Quartet concert. Sadly the auditorium was not similarly packed, the hall’s admirable initiative of broadening its repertoire away from mainly dead... Read more... |
'Migrations' String Quartet Weekend, National Concert Hall, Dublin review - memorials and masterpiecesTuesday, 27 February 2024![]() It was chance that the National Concert Hall’s weekend of quartet events featuring responses to war and refugees should coincide with the second anniversary of Putin’s Invasion of Ukraine. By late Saturday morning thousands of Ukrainians and friends... Read more... |
RSNO Chorus, Doughty, Greyfriars Kirk, Edinburgh review - breaking out in anniversary BrucknerMonday, 26 February 2024![]() The Scottish Chamber Orchestra Chorus has a well-established concert life away from the main orchestra; the Royal Scottish National Orchestra Chorus less so. So it was refreshing to get to hear them going it (almost) alone in Edinburgh’s Greyfriars... Read more... |
Sánchez, National Symphony Orchestra, Martín, National Concert Hall, Dublin review - Spanish panacheSaturday, 24 February 2024![]() Ravel’s Boléro, however well you think you know it, usually wows in concert with its disconcerting mix of sensuality, fun and violence. Context can make it even more powerful: in this case as the culmination of NSO Chief Conductor Jaime Martín’s... Read more... |
Uproar, Rafferty, Royal Welsh College, Cardiff review - a rare spring in the new music stepSaturday, 24 February 2024![]() It’s not often one comes out of a concert of mainly new works with a spring in one’s step. A sigh of relief is rather more usual. But this concert on Thursday by the Welsh new music ensemble Uproar was an exception, partly but by no means... Read more... |
Fung, BBC Philharmonic, Weilerstein, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review - clever and comicalMonday, 19 February 2024![]() Placing the UK premiere of Katherine Balch’s whisper concerto (for cello and orchestra) after Haydn’s Symphony No. 100 was probably an inspired idea from the BBC Philharmonic and conductor Joshua Weilerstein.In its day, the so-called “Military”... Read more... |
Malofeev, BBCSO, Lintu, Barbican review - finesse as well as fireworksSaturday, 17 February 2024![]() This was a muesli programme: nutty, crunchy, just sweet enough, its success lying in the balance of the various ingredients. At times, such was the explosiveness of the playing, it felt like popping candy had been added to the muesli, but in a good... Read more... |
Lugansky, Strasbourg Philharmonic Orchestra, Letonja, Cadogan Hall review - Russian soul, French flairWednesday, 14 February 2024![]() To judge by the post-interval empty seats near me, some of the Cadogan Hall audience had turned up last night solely to hear Nikolai Lugansky play Rachmaninov’s Second Piano Concerto. Well, the more fool them. For sure they would have enjoyed their... Read more... |
