Tchaikovsky
Tsujii, RLPO, Petrenko, Philharmonic Hall, LiverpoolFriday, 21 November 2014![]() The knots on the purse-strings have certainly been untied at the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic and it was good to hear another world première in less than a week. This time it was the turn of Michael Torke, the composer of Ecstatic Orange and Yellow... Read more... |
Samuelsen Duo, RLPO, Petrenko, Philharmonic Hall, LiverpoolSunday, 16 November 2014![]() Major change is afoot at the Liverpool Philharmonic. The new season has just opened as Philharmonic Hall has been undergoing a major refurbishment and earlier concerts during the autumn were held in the gargantuan acoustics of both cathedrals, where... Read more... |
Prom 43: Skride, BBCSO, GardnerTuesday, 19 August 2014![]() The Russians were coming - and the prospect of Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture, even without the added attraction of hearing it in Igor Buketoff’s questionable choral arrangement where the Tsarist hymn is taken at its word and does a Boris Godunov on us... Read more... |
Swan Lake, Mariinsky Ballet, Royal Opera HouseSunday, 03 August 2014![]() For a dance company, the always delicate balance between preserving your heritage and creating an exciting future becomes especially hard to negotiate when you are the most venerable institution in your field. The Mariinsky Ballet, now on tour in... Read more... |
The Queen of Spades, Grange Park OperaFriday, 11 July 2014![]() For my money, The Queen of Spades is one of the great nineteenth-century operas, a masterpiece of dramma per musica. There will always be pure spirits who cry “vulgar” at late Tchaikovsky. But the charge is absurd. Anyone with ears can hear the... Read more... |
Swan Lake, Dada Masilo, Sadler's WellsThursday, 19 June 2014![]() There are all sorts of companies and shows out there that claim to “rock” the ballet, or otherwise shake up, take down or reinvent an art form that, they imply, is (breathe it softly, the dirty word) elitist, or at least irrelevant. Few, I’d imagine... Read more... |
theartsdesk Q&A: Soprano Kristine OpolaisTuesday, 17 June 2014![]() The best that you can usually expect from an interview is that it takes off from stock beginnings in spontaneous and unexpected directions. This one was rather exciting from the start: the end of a day in the life of a new role, Puccini's good-time... Read more... |
Serenade/Sweet Violets/DGV, Royal BalletThursday, 15 May 2014![]() Some artists acquire (or create) cults of personality because – Byron, Wagner or Van Gogh – they are just so obviously fruity. Some others, though less fruity, are venerated because their work is so tear-prickingly astonishing that we are desperate... Read more... |
A silver rose for Glyndebourne's 80thMonday, 10 March 2014![]() Der Rosenkavalier, Richard Strauss and Hugo von Hofmannsthal’s 1911 “comedy for music” about love, money and masquerading in a putative 18th-century Vienna, is a repertoire staple around the world. Continental houses throw it together without a... Read more... |
BBC Ballet SeasonMonday, 10 March 2014![]() There’s been reasonable diversity in the ballet shown on the BBC in recent years – from full-length broadcasts of Matthew Bourne’s Sleeping Beauty and The Red Shoes to the compelling 2011 fly-on-the-wall The Agony and the Ecstasy. That’s why it was... Read more... |
Repin, Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra, Fedoseyev, RFHTuesday, 25 February 2014![]() Valery Gergiev once described Yevgeny Svetlanov’s USSR - later Russian - State Symphony Orchestra to me as “an orchestra with a voice”. Then Svetlanov died and the voice cracked. Which are the other big Russian personalities now? Gergiev’s own... Read more... |
The Sleeping Beauty, Royal BalletSunday, 23 February 2014![]() Clement Crisp, veteran ballet critic, once expressed his appreciation for Ashton’s Scènes de Ballet by saying that “if one had to throw ballets off the back of a sleigh, this would be the last to go.” Charming though the train of thought was that... Read more... |
