wed 05/02/2025

graham rickson

Bio
Graham, who writes on classical music, lives in Leeds.

Articles By Graham Rickson

Classical CDs Weekly: William Barton, William Lawes, Bernard Weinstock

Read more...

The Leeds International Piano Competition finals, Leeds Town Hall

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Cage, Sibelius, Stravinsky, Smaro Gregoriadou

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Gershwin, William Berger, JACK Quartet

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Gál, Schumann, Shostakovich, Tiomkin

Read more...

The Hitchcock Players: Hume Cronyn, Shadow of a Doubt

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Dubois, Sam Hayden, Liszt

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Berlioz, Humperdinck, L'Olimpiade

Read more...

The Hitchcock Players: Barbara Bel Geddes, Vertigo

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Messiaen, Saint-Saëns, Meraner Curmusik

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Elgar, Goebbels, Baiba Skride

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Beethoven, Haydn, Gabriel Prokofiev

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Nielsen, Tchaikovsky, Reiko Fujisawa, The Dublin Drag Orchestra

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Britten, Miloš Karadaglić, Tom Waits

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Mozart, Ropartz, Sounds of the 30s

Read more...

Classical CDs Weekly: Debussy, Handel, Kuss Quartet

Read more...

Pages

latest in today

Help to give theartsdesk a future!

It all started on 09/09/09. That memorable date, September 9 2009, marked the debut of theartsdesk.com.

It followed some...

Mrs President, Charing Cross Theatre review - Mary Todd Linc...

The phenomenal global success of Six began when two young writers decided to give voices to the wives of a...

Album: Biig Piig - 11:11

Is there such a thing as a boundary between pop and alternative any more? The presence of strange characters like Chappell Roan, Billie Eilish and...

Onegin, Royal Ballet review - a poignant lesson about the pe...

It would be hard to find an antihero more anti than Eugene Onegin. The protagonist of Alexander Pushkin’s long verse novel of 1833 is a wrecker of...

… Blackbird Hour, Bush Theatre review - an unrelentingly tou...

In a world tainted with racism and homophobia, the ...

Blu-ray: Stray Dog

Kurosawa’s 1949 thriller probes post-war morality in a Tokyo whose ruins and US occupation mostly remain just out of shot, in a heatwave causing...

Nakariakov, SCO, Emelyanychev, Queen's Hall, Edinburgh...

What a delight to see an almost full Queen’s Hall for a programme solely of...

Vietnam: The War That Changed America, Apple TV+ review - pa...

It’s been 50 years since the USA bowed to the inevitable and pulled out of Vietnam, in the midst of harrowing scenes of anguish and chaos. Apple’s...