Interviews, Q&amp;As and feature articles<br />

First Person: violinist Tom Greed on breaking down barriers in the presentation of chamber music

Unscary Schoenberg is on the bill of enterprising young musicians' latest new-look event

For musicians, the period from early 2020 to mid-2021 was one of great reflection, with so many questions to puzzle over. Could we satisfy the basic need to interact with others and express ourselves? What on earth was Zoom, and how, as performers, could we learn to use technology to provide live experiences? Would things ever go back to the way they were? And should they?

First Person: Ten Years On - Flamenco guitarist Paco Peña pays tribute to his friend, the late, great Paco de Lucía

10 YEARS ON - PACO PENA A tribute to his friend, the late, great flamenco star Paco de Lucía

On the 10th anniversary of his death, memories of the prodigious musician who broadened the reach of flamenco into jazz and beyond

There are moments that forever remain imprinted in our consciousness, engraved on the general map of our lives. I cannot forget the excitement of seeing snow for the first time in Córdoba, aged three or four, rushing to walk on it only to slip straight away and fall on my behind! Or when I discovered the sea, in Cádiz.

First Person: pioneering juggler Sean Gandini reflects on how the spirit of Pina Bausch has infiltrated his work

As Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch's 'Nelken' comes to Sadler’s Wells, a tribute from across the art forms

I am a juggler. My wife Kati Ylä-Hokkala is also a juggler. Our life for the last three decades has been juggling. We have been fortunate to be practising this art form at a time when mathematical and creative developments meant that our vocabulary went from about 30 patterns to thousands. The Golden Age of juggling.

First Person: contralto Hilary Summers on going beyond her baroque and contemporary comfort zones

CONTRALTO HILARY SUMMERS on recording a wacky collaboration with Dutch colleagues

On recording 'Circus Dinogad', a wacky collaboration with distinguished Dutch colleagues

Back in the summer of 2020 when the arts industry was largely dormant and many professional singers were either moodily knocking back the gin or uploading poor quality phone videos of themselves bellowing Puccini arias from their doorsteps, I received an email.

Best of 2023: Books

BEST OF 2023: BOOKS As the year draws to a close, we look back at the best books we opened

As the year draws to a close, we look back at the best books we opened

From wandering Rachmaninoff to Ulysses tribute, or a poet’s boyhood in Dundee to sleeplessness and arboreal inner lives, our reviewers share their literary picks from 2023.

Best of 2023: Classical music concerts

BEST OF 2023: CLASSICAL MUSIC No drop in orchestral high standards, and youth shines again

No drop in orchestral high standards, and youth shines again

However dark the future may seem for UK arts funding, each year begins with a beacon of light, passed on to shine twice more, in the Easter and summer holidays: the ever more resourceful and generous concertgiving of the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain, always among the highlights of the classical music scene.

Best of 2023: Theatre

BEST OF 2023: THEATRE The National Theatre fielded hit after hit, smaller venues scored too

The National Theatre fielded hit after hit, and smaller venues scored as well

Wait, and your wishes are answered. That seemed to be the case during the theatre year just gone, following on from 2022 when new British writing of quality seemed thin on the ground.

Best of 2023: Film

BEST OF 2023: FILM Theartsdesk's film critics cast their net wide

Kicking off the top choices of the year, theartsdesk's film critics cast their net wide

Numbers indicate if entries are listed in order of preference


Saskia Baron

Anatomy of a Fall

Broker

Fallen Leaves

Joyland

Killers of the Flower Moon

Otto Baxter: Not a F**ing Horror Story

Return to Seoul

St Omer

Scrapper

A Thousand and One

theartsdesk in Ravenna - Riccardo Muti passes on a lifetime's operatic wisdom

★★★★THEARTSDESK IN RAVENNA Riccardo Muti passes on a lifetime's operatic wisdom

Three unforgettable evenings with the most experienced living exponent of Italian opera

Does “the practice of opera singing in Italy” need help from UNESCO, which has newly inscribed it on the “Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity”? Italian opera is surely immensely popular worldwide. But when it comes to practising the art properly, its greatest senior exponent, Riccardo Muti, powerfully argues that Verdi and Bellini, his most recent special projects in the city where he lives, Ravenna, need as much respect and care as Beethoven or Schubert.

Powell and Pressburger: The Composers

POWELL AND PRESSBURGER: THE COMPOSERS Two musicians, both largely forgotten, gave the duo's films much of their power

Two musicians, both largely forgotten, gave the duo's films much of their power

Unlike, say, Hitchcock and Bernard Herrmann, Michael Powell’s working relationships with musicians were cordial, particularly his collaborations with composers Allan Gray and Brian Easdale.