choral music
BBC Symphony Chorus, Stephen Jackson, Royal Albert HallMonday, 09 August 2010Every year there are a couple of Proms that have a haphazard look about them, as if a fire had suddenly broken out in the BBC archives, and the programming committee grabbed whatever came to hand – a piano quartet, a couple of choral odes and a... Read more... |
The Kingdom, Three Choirs FestivalSunday, 08 August 2010The Three Choirs Festival is with us again, for the 283rd year – almost as many, it seems, as The Mousetrap: this year we are in Gloucester. Nowadays, though, this great festival is no longer imprisoned, Barchester-like, in the cathedral close, but... Read more... |
Singing for Life, BBC Four/ Gazza's Tears, ITV1Monday, 05 July 2010I once sat in a rehearsal room in a brick-box theatre on the outskirts of Cape Town. The cast was warming up for Carmen. First, the choreographer put 40 mostly black South African singers through a gruelling physical warm-up. Opera singers are... Read more... |
Gareth Goes to Glyndebourne, BBC TwoThursday, 17 June 2010We love Gareth Malone, don’t we? We are big fans of the Pied Piper of primetime. And so we should be. The youth of today seem impressively eager to down tools, put away childish things like knives and drugs and safe-cracking equipment, and follow... Read more... |
Turner Prize winner takes conceptual art to new heightsSunday, 02 May 2010Lift music is given a conceptual twist by former Turner Prize-winning artist Martin Creed this week. As part of the Southbank’s Chorus! festival, Creed has recreated his Work No. 409 especially for the Royal Festival Hall’s glass lift: as visitors... Read more... |
Bach B minor Mass, The Sixteen, Barbican HallThursday, 11 March 2010As one who came to know the B minor Mass singing in a clogged, 150-strong choir, I welcomed the authentic-movement rush in the 1980s to whittle it down to What Bach Might Have Wanted (if, indeed, he had lived to hear his ideal religious... Read more... |
theartsdesk Q&A: Actor Simon Russell BealeSaturday, 06 March 2010The career of Simon Russell Beale (b. 1961) needs little introduction. It took wing with the Royal Shakespeare Company but, give or take the odd foray into other buildings, including work with Sam Mendes at the Donmar Warehouse and more recently... Read more... |
Rachmaninov Vespers, Retrospect Ensemble, Cadogan HallThursday, 04 February 2010In taking on a new name last year, Retrospect Ensemble and director Matthew Halls were aiming to get rid of the “early music” label that had been stapled on to them in their previous incarnation as the King’s Consort. When I spoke to Halls last... Read more... |
Lucumi Choir, St John's Church, WaterlooWednesday, 23 December 2009As we gathered in St John’s Church in Waterloo last Thursday to hear The London Lucumi Choir perform, on the same day people in their thousands were making the pilgrimage to the Church of San Lazaro in Cuba. In that church, just outside Havana,... Read more... |
Messiah, ENOFriday, 27 November 2009There are so many ways a dramatic production of Messiah can go wrong it is almost unbearable to think about it. Certainly, there was a palpable buzz of nervousness in the Coliseum about last night’s audience as they took their seats. Did English... Read more... |
Gwilym Simcock, Queen Elizabeth HallSunday, 22 November 2009Melodically rich, harmonically daring, rhythmically subtle, pianist Gwilym Simcock's quartet piece, “Longing To Be”, which kicked off last night's Queen Elizabeth Hall gig was one of the most jaw-dropping performances I've heard at this year's... Read more... |
The Damnation of Faust, Gergiev, Barbican HallWednesday, 23 September 2009The Damnation of Faust is so chock-full of special effects that you half expect a list of technical advisors in place of the single name Hector Berlioz. But it is just he – wizard of his imaginings – who continues to surprise and even shock no... Read more... |
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