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

Powell and Pressburger: A Celtic storm brewing

The Archers stepped up their wartime campaign against materialism with the mystical Scottish romance 'I Know Where I'm Going!'

“Nothing is stronger than true love,” a young laird says to a headstrong young woman in Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s I Know Where I’m Going! (1945), his voice heard above the sounds of wind and waves. She replies, “No, nothing.”

First Person: novelist Pip Adam on the sound of injustice

Author Pip Adam describes how her time working in prisons and interest in the jurisprudence of noise gave life to her recent sci-fi novel, 'Audition'

I know it rattles me, so I try to prepare for it. But I am never fully prepared for the noise.

Michael Powell: a happy time with Bartók’s Bluebeard

★★★★ MICHAEL POWELL'S BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Fine performers and fantastical visuals

Fine performers in perfect balance with fantastical visuals for this profound one-act opera

In his final years Michael Powell mooted the possibility of a Bartók trilogy. He wanted to add to the growing popularity of his work on Bluebeard’s Castle, the deepest of one-act operas, an idea he had previously rejected of filming the lurid "pantomime" The Miraculous Mandarin and, as third instalment, not the earlier ballet The Wooden Prince but a film about the composer’s time in America and his return, after death, to Hungary.

First Person: Natalia Franklin Pierce, Executive Director of Nonclassical, on 'creating a sense of belonging'

NATALIA FRANKLIN PIERCE Executive Director of Nonclassical on 'creating a sense of belonging'

On bringing classical music to wider audiences - and appealing for help in a good cause

Despite my double-barrelled surname (my parents weren't married when I was born – so I was given both their names), a career within contemporary classical music definitely wasn't on the cards for me as a child. My Dad was a self-made man from a North London council estate, and while my parents loved music, classical music didn’t feature much and they regretted not being able to play any instruments.

Powell and Pressburger: In Prospero's Room

★★★★★ POWELL AND PRESSBURGER: IN PROSPERO'S ROOM A magical day at Derek Jarman’s Dungeness cottage, dancing with the ghosts of Shakespeare, Powell and Pressburger

A magical day at Derek Jarman’s Dungeness cottage, dancing with the ghosts of Shakespeare, Powell and Pressburger

There’s a thread of bright magic running through British cinema, from Powell and Pressburger through Nic Roeg, Derek Jarman and Lynne Ramsay, and it’s wrapped around Jarman’s last home like fisherman’s rope.

Powell and Pressburger: the glueman cometh

POWELL AND PRESSBURGER - A CANTERBURY TALE The glueman cometh

A perverse village magus plays god with three wartime pilgrims in 'A Canterbury Tale', the Archers' strangest film

The shop assistant turned World War Two Land Army girl Alison Smith, clad in a summer dress on the sabbath, steps through a glade onto a hilltop track above the village of Chillingbourne in Kent. It’s the same road once taken by medieval pilgrims riding to seek blessings or do penance at Thomas Becket’s shrine in Canterbury Cathedral.

theartsdesk at Wexford Festival Opera - four operas and a recital in one crazy day

THEARTS DESK AT WEXFORD FESTIVAL OPERA Four operas and a recital in one crazy day

Youth takes the comedy award in fringe delights alongside a well-done schlocky rarity

Imagine a Glyndebourne season where all those promising young singers in the chorus get to be principals in a series of fringe operas. At Wexford, they already have their work cut out, though this year not so much in the three main rarities – hence the sheer joy of witnessing so many fine performances in Puccini’s Suor Angelica and Gianni Schicchi, Donizetti’s La fille du régiment and Rossini’s L’Italiana in Algeri.

Powell and Pressburger: Spy masters

POWELL AND PRESSBURGER: SPY MASTERS On the wartime spy films, and Alfred Hitchcock

Though less renowned, Powell and Pressburger’s wartime spy films put some of Alfred Hitchcock’s in the shade

Alfred Hitchcock and Michael Powell are, almost certainly, Britain’s greatest directors. Hitchcock was slightly older, and entered the film business earlier; in fact, Powell worked as a stills photographer on Hitchcock’s Champagne and Blackmail, in the late Twenties, shortly before making his own films.

Powell and Pressburger: Battleships and Byron

POWELL AND PRESSBURGER: BATTLESHIPS AND BYRON The 1950s war films

The 1950s war films 'The Battle of the River Plate' and 'Ill Met By Moonlight' turned a clapped-out genre into art

Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger made a glorious run of movies from The Spy in Black (1939) to The Small Back Room (1949). Yet the duo’s reputation went into steep decline in the 1950s, and they began to encounter difficulty in securing finance for projects. There were no Archers movies at all between The Tales of Hoffmann (1951) and Oh…Rosalinda!! (1955), and both of those "total films" bombed with critics and audiences who were then into realism and violently opposed to exotic spectacles.

theartsdesk in Ukraine - Stankovych's 'Psalms of War' at the Lviv National Opera

THEARTSDESK IN UKRAINE - STANKOVYCH'S 'PSALMS OF WAR' A powerful new work written in blood from the inside

A powerful new work written in blood from the inside

Yevhen Stankovych is Ukraine’s most important living composer and – after decades of writing music that seems to grow from this country’s rich black earth, tribulations, literature and folklore – he now contributes, with his latest piece, the most cogent musical event of the current calamity. Psalms of War  premiered last weekend at the Lviv National Opera, is not only the most powerful musical expression of Ukraine’s pain and just war, but probably the most impactful war music of our time.