20th century
Bow Down, The Village Underground, Spitalfields FestivalThursday, 14 June 2012![]() There’s a lovely moment in The Opera Group’s production of Bow Down. An actor motions to a member of the audience and grins bleakly: “He thought he was here for an opera….”. It’s an aside, over before we’ve even fully registered it, but it’s... Read more... |
Conlon Nancarrow Weekend, South Bank CentreWednesday, 25 April 2012![]() This has to be the only music festival I've ever been to where two vacuum cleaners were on standby in case the star performer conked out. But that's what happens when your star performer is a player piano - they seem to run on Hoover tubes. With 11... Read more... |
Melvyn Bragg on Class and Culture, BBC TwoSaturday, 25 February 2012![]() The Lord count was perhaps surprisingly high in the first instalment of Melvyn Bragg on Class and Culture. Among the talking heads I counted there was only one who wasn’t a life peer or a “proper” hereditary one, and there was only one who was... Read more... |
The Mighty Uke, Hyde Park Picture House, LeedsThursday, 08 December 2011![]() Recorded music has a lot to answer for. Until its arrival, most people made their own music – at home, using whatever resources were to hand. If you were lucky, you might have owned a piano. The less well-off might have had access to a ukulele. Tony... Read more... |
Searching For Summertime, BBC FourThursday, 24 November 2011![]() It’s a song which hangs in the air like pollen or reefer smoke, before gradually rising like a never-to-be-answered prayer. It began life as a lullaby but grew up to be a protest song, a scream of existential angst and even a purred invitation to... Read more... |
WNO Orchestra, Koenigs, St David's Hall, CardiffSaturday, 29 October 2011![]() “Blessed are the dead”, sings Brahms in the final movement of his German Requiem. And as far as the rest of this concert was concerned it was perhaps just as well. In Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder, the children are all dead; and in Schoenberg’s... Read more... |
Building the Revolution: Soviet Art and Architecture, 1915-1935, Royal AcademyWednesday, 26 October 2011![]() I’m not sure I’ve ever felt so ambivalent about a show, and so strongly both pro and con. The pros first, then. This is an astonishing, revelatory exhibition of avant-garde art and architecture in the Soviet Union in the brief but hectic period from... Read more... |
Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975Friday, 21 October 2011![]() This is a strangely kaleidoscopic approach to documentary. A selection of recently unearthed footage and interviews which shows the Black Power movement in the USA through the eyes of idealistic Swedish film-makers, now re-edited and framed with the... Read more... |
Il Trittico, Royal Opera HouseTuesday, 13 September 2011![]() You don't need to buy into the loose hell-purgatory-paradise trajectory of Puccini's one-act operas to greet the triptych as his comprehensive masterpiece, full of wry interconnections, orchestral wizardry and grateful if tough vocal writing.... Read more... |
Classical CDs Weekly: Bridge, Mahler, Ksenija SidorovaFriday, 09 September 2011![]() This week there's another new Mahler symphony recording, along with some disquieting British piano music and an enjoyable disc of originals and transcriptions played by a young Baltic accordionist.Frank Bridge – Piano Music Vol 3 Mark Bebbington (... Read more... |
BBC Proms: Jansen, Philadelphia Orchestra, DutoitFriday, 09 September 2011![]() After filing for bankruptcy earlier this year, the Philadelphia Orchestra seemed poised to be the flagship cultural casualty of the financial crisis. Five months on and the bills continue to rise, but in the best Titanic tradition the band are... Read more... |
Classical CDs Weekly: Brahms, Desyatnikov, Glière, TchaikovskyFriday, 02 September 2011![]() We head east this week - new pieces by a contemporary Russian composer, and a bargain box set showcasing the flamboyant orchestral music of a neglected Russian. And a famous viola player leads a young Moscow orchestra in electrifying accounts of... Read more... |
