Akugbo, Harper, The Jago, Dalston review - revelatory pairing of trumpet and harp

★★★★ AKUGBO, HARPER, THE JAGO, DALSTON Revelatory pairing of trumpet and harp

Harpist demonstates his instrument has attitude and soul to match trumpeter's liquid gold

For its 22nd concert the hugely successful initiative, Through The Noise, took its audience to The Jago in Dalston, the live music venue formerly known as Passing Clouds. Here, on a stage more familiar with reggae, blues and Afrobeat, 25-year-old classical trumpeter Aaron Akugbo joined forces with harpist Milo Harper (pictured below) for a series of sultry, haunting numbers that explored the possibilities of this unusual pairing.

Castalian String Quartet, Wigmore Hall review - late Britten keeps equally demanding company

★★★★ CASTALIAN STRING QUARTET, WIGMORE HALL Late Britten keeps demanding company

These brilliant young musicians transfigure everything they play

Rigorous, hauntingly original and unlike each other, Britten’s three numbered quartets could share a programme and still stake equal claims on our attention. That might be tough on the players, but the Castalians haven’t been easy on themselves in the three concerts they’ve given to share out the honours between Britten and other composers.

Classical CDs: Hellscapes, harpists and fairy mounds

CLASSICAL CDS Contemporary ballet, epic symphonies in new clothes, renaissance madrigals

Contemporary ballet, epic symphonies in new clothes and renaissance madrigals

 

Ades DanteThomas Adès: Dante Los Angeles Philharmonic, Los Angeles Master Chorale/Gustavo Dudamel (Nonesuch)

Lapwood, Hallé, Niemeyer, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review - light and fiery Poulenc concerto

★★★★ LAPWOOD, HALLE, NIEMEYER, BRIDGEWATER HALL, MANCHESTER Light and fiery Poulenc concerto

A varied evening with a star organist – and a world premiere

“Let the organ thunder!” is the sentiment a lot of us will associate with an orchestral concert featuring the king of instruments. The Hallé’s programme with Anna Lapwood as soloist (repeating, from her BBC Proms debut with them in 2021, the Saint-Saëns “Organ” Symphony) seemed designed to evoke that thought.

But the organ in the Bridgewater Hall isn’t exactly made for thundering. Big Bertha it is not. What it is really good at is a light, clear and sometimes fiery sound – ideal for Poulenc’s 1939 Organ Concerto, which was the undoubted highlight of the evening.

Bell, Dreisig, LPO, Gardner, RFH review - royal rifts, and uplifting Mahler

Brett Dean's warring queens give way to a bracing journey through struggle to serenity

Brett Dean’s opera Hamlet will play at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich in June: the next stage of an acclaimed progress that began at Glyndebourne in 2017. Now on the last stretch of his three-year stint as composer-in-residence with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, the prolific and versatile Australian – formerly a violist with the Berlin Phil – evidently still has warring royal families on his mind.

Goosby, RSNO, Bringuier, Usher Hall, Edinburgh review - lyrical colour and dynamic brilliance

A dazzling young violinist and a first-rate stand-in conductor offer terrific Tchaikovsky

When a publication as venerable as Gramophone features an artist on its front cover, it’s a surefire sign that they’ve hit the big time. This month that honour fell to young American violinist Randall Goosby and, coincidentally, he was the soloist for this week’s concerts with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. I hadn’t come across him before this double encounter but, if his Usher Hall performance is anything to go by, then the hype around him is justified.

LPO, Jurowski, RFH / LSO, BBC Singers, Rattle, Barbican review - spiderwebs, sublimity and a powerful speech

LPO, JUROWSKI, RFH / LSO, BBC SINGERS, RATTLE, BARBICAN Spiderwebs, sublimity and a powerful speech

Mahler's Seventh and Richard Strauss's 'Don Quixote' keep lofty company

Complex, ambiguous late romantic works in concert programmes need something more direct to keep them company. Mozart and Richard Strauss make excellent bedfellows (and Strauss was an extraordinary Mozart interpreter): no wonder Vladimir Jurowski’s Saturday night pairing worked well. But Mahler and Poulenc? That wasn’t Simon Rattle’s original intention; but in campaigning for the BBC Singers by inviting them to follow his LSO Mahler 7, he hit upon a rare ideal.

Ohlsson, BBC Philharmonic, Storgårds, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review - a Rachmaninov special

★★★★★ OHLSSON, BBC PHILHARMONIC, STORGARDS A Rachmaninov special

A consummate pianist in complete control of a concerto Everest

Maybe he thought it was a relaxing way to celebrate his recent 75th birthday – maybe he just fancied a trip to Manchester to play with the BBC Philharmonic – either way there was something very special to hear in Garrick Ohlsson’s Rachmaninov Third Piano Concerto on Saturday.

Elsa Dreisig, Jonathan Ware, Wigmore Hall review - a glorious voice unleashed

Innovating, teasing, testing limits...

French-Danish soprano Elsa Dreisig’s operatic schedule is so busy and so successful, it is perhaps not surprising that she – and Texas-born pianist Jonathan Ware – treat the song recital platform as a place of freedom, where, rather than delivering the predictable or the comforting, they can test out ideas and set themselves challenges. As she has told one interviewer, it is a place where "I can push my artistic practice to its ultimate limit."