18th century
Houghton Revisited: The Walpole CollectionSaturday, 21 September 2013![]() What is the extraordinary, crowd-drawing appeal of a picture collection reunited, for a short time only, with its original surroundings? Well, for a start, this is no modest assembly of old masters, and Houghton Hall's elaborately crafted ensemble... Read more... |
Le nozze di Figaro, Royal OperaTuesday, 17 September 2013![]() Revivals, especially at Covent Garden, too often wrong-foot high expectations. This one should have shone, with two known treasures among the cast (Lucy Crowe and Luca Pisaroni), an experienced Mozart conductor in John Eliot Gardiner and a handsome-... Read more... |
Paul Bunyan/The Secret Marriage, British Youth Opera, Peacock TheatreThursday, 12 September 2013![]() It’s raining Bunyans, and since Britten’s early American operetta with its sights originally set on Broadway teems with song and invention that can’t be a bad thing. A fortnight after Welsh National Youth Opera commandeered Stephen Fry to voice-over... Read more... |
The Flames of Paris, Bolshoi Ballet, Royal Opera HouseMonday, 19 August 2013![]() The Bolshoi left it till last to be most itself, to dance a ballet that is truly of its blood, its seed - its closing on Alexei Ratmansky's The Flames of Paris will leave much happiness in the memory to override the problematic productions of... Read more... |
Hippolyte et Aricie, Glyndebourne Festival OperaSunday, 30 June 2013![]() Jean-Philippe Rameau wrote Hippolyte et Aricie in 1733 at the age of 50. It was his first opera and his greatest. In its five acts, its visits to the woods of Diana, the groves of Venus, the fires of Pluto and the domestic meltdown in the house... Read more... |
theartsdesk Q&A: Mezzo-soprano Sarah ConnollyTuesday, 25 June 2013![]() It may have taken Sarah Connolly a decade or two, a detour to choral singing and a serious flirtation with jazz, but the British mezzo-soprano has most definitely arrived at full-blown National Treasure status. Perhaps it was her career-changing... Read more... |
Imeneo, Academy of Ancient Music, Hogwood, Barbican HallThursday, 30 May 2013![]() There are Handel operas where you wait impatiently for the handful of truly original set-pieces to light up the action, hoping the singers are equal to their challenges. One such is surely Siroe, Re di Persia, bravely staged at the Göttingen Handel... Read more... |
theartsdesk in Göttingen: Handel goes eastSunday, 26 May 2013![]() Let me confess: I had to return to lovely Göttingen as much for the frogs as for the Handel. Puffing out their throats like bubblegum, the amphibians' brekekekek chorus in the ponds of the great university’s botanic gardens actually made a more... Read more... |
Eska/Spiro, The Foundling MuseumSunday, 12 May 2013![]() There have been memorable nights at the Foundling Museum recently, with Alasdair Roberts delivering a superb solo show in April, while on Friday the Nest Collective hosted a double bill of Zimbabwean-born singer Eska and Bristol’s masters of English... Read more... |
L'Allegro, Il Penseroso ed il Moderato, St John's Smith SquareSaturday, 11 May 2013![]() The return of the Lufthansa Festival of Baroque Music to London each year always heralds the beginning of summer. Granted this beginning is usually damp and decidedly chilly, but there’s a hopefulness in the air that things might be about to change... Read more... |
The Genius of Josiah Wedgwood, BBC TwoSaturday, 20 April 2013![]() As a self-taught chemist, innovative industrialist, a businessman who exploited and developed new means of distribution and marketing, an anti-slavery campaigner and a man dealing with his own disability, the Staffordshire potter Josiah Wedgwood was... Read more... |
Leif Ove Andsnes, Wigmore HallWednesday, 10 April 2013![]() If ever there was such a thing as a safe pair of pianistic hands then they would belong to Norway’s Leif Ove Andsnes. There’s a cool, patrician control to everything he does that speaks to thorough preparation, careful interpretative choices and... Read more... |
