overnight reviews

Shibe, LSO, Adès, Barbican review - gaudy and glorious new music alongside serene Sibelius

★★★★ SHIBE, LSO, ADES, BARBICAN Gaudy and glorious new music alongside serene Sibelius

Adès’s passion makes persuasive case for the music he loves, both new and old

Many orchestral concerts leaven two or three established classics with something new or unusual. The LSO reversed that formula at the Barbican last night, with three pieces written since 2000 offset by just one familiar item, Sibelius’s Third Symphony. The result was invigorating, challenging – and very enjoyable.

Frankenstein review - the Prometheus of the charnel house

★★★ FRANKENSTEIN Guillermo del Toro is fitfully inspired, but often lost in long-held ambitions

Guillermo del Toro is fitfully inspired, but often lost in long-held ambitions

Guillermo del Toro strains every sinew to bring his dream film to life, steeping it in religious symbolism and the history of art, cannily restitching Mary Shelley’s narrative and aiming grandly high. He can’t sustain Frankenstein’s heartbeat over two-and-a-half hours which try to justify a lifetime’s devotion to the subject. There are, though, marvellous passages where the ages of reason and magic meet.

Solar Eyes, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham review - local lads lay down some new tunes for a home crowd

★★★★ SOLAR EYES, BIRMINGHAM Local lads lay down some new tunes for a home crowd

Psychedelic indie dance music marinated in swirling dry ice

Their new album may have been born out of a deep dive into Quentin Tarantino’s cinematic reimagining of the post-Manson killings’ atmosphere of late 1960’s Los Angeles, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. However, Solar Eye’s intro music as they took the stage at the Hare and Hounds this weekend wasn’t Charlie’s “Look at your Game, Girl” or “Cease to Exist” but something far more triumphant – the theme from Rocky.

The Free Association launch review - strong start for improv company

Troupe moves into permanent home

It’s always good to welcome the opening of a new arts venue, and sadly it doesn’t happen too often in the current economic climate. But bucking the trend is The Free Association, an improv comedy troupe who have been plying their trade in various upstairs rooms in pubs for several years and have now found a permanent base in southeast London.

Anja Mittermüller, Richard Fu, Wigmore Hall review - a glorious hall debut

★★★★ ANJA MITTERMULLER, RICHARD FU, WIGMORE HALL A glorious hall debut

The Austrian mezzo shines - at the age of 22

Helping to build the careers of superb young singers is what Wigmore Hall has done for decades: I still remember Olaf Bär’s debut in the hall in 1983, having won the Walther Gruner Lieder competition, and also Matthias Goerne’s in 1997.

Music Reissues Weekly: Evie Sands - I Can’t Let Go

EVIE SANDS - I CAN'T LET GO Treasure-packed tribute to one of 60s America’s great vocal stylists

Diligent, treasure-packed tribute to one of Sixties’ America’s great vocal stylists

Over 1965 to 1968 Brooklyn's Evie Sands issued a string of singles with classic top sides. Amongst them were “Take Me For a Little While,” “I Can't Let Go,” “Picture me Gone” and “Angel of the Morning.” For reasons which are tackled in the essay coming with I Can’t Let Go – the first-ever collection of Sands’ seven-inch A- and B-sides – all either charted low, or not at all.

Gesualdo Passione, Les Arts Florissants, Amala Dior Company, Barbican review - inspired collaboration excavates the music's humanity

★★★★ GESUALDO PASSIONE, BARBICAN Inspired collaboration excavates the music's humanity

At times it was like watching an anarchic religious procession

This powerful, austere collaboration between Les Arts Florissants and the Amala Dianor Company – presented as part of Dance Umbrella – excavated all the violence, grief and transcendence of the events surrounding Christ’s betrayal and crucifixion.

After the Hunt review - muddled #MeToo provocation

★★ AFTER THE HUNT Julia Roberts excels despite misfiring drama

Julia Roberts excels despite misfiring drama

The last few years have seen the much-needed positivity of the #MeToo movement followed by a raft of ethical confrontations, whether it’s differences over the feminist generation gap, or those for and against cancel culture.

Luca Guadagnino’s new campus drama wades enthusiastically into these murky waters, perhaps intending to spark new debate and to ruffle some feathers, but instead sinking beneath them. It’s a perplexing, slowly infuriating affair. 

Cockerham, Manchester Camerata, Sheen, Martin Harris Centre, Manchester review - re-enacting the dawn of modernism

★★★★ COCKERHAM, MANCHESTER CAMERATA, SHEEN Re-enacting the dawn of modernism

Two UK premieres added to three miniatures from a seminal event of January 1914

Manchester Camerata have had a ten-year association with composer-conductor Jack Sheen. For this short programme, one of the free Walter Carroll Lunchtime Concert series at the Martin Harris Centre in the University of Manchester, he and they created a partial re-enactment of the January 1914 inaugural concert of the Société Musicale Indépendante in Paris. To works by Stravinsky, Delage and Ravel were added two UK premieres, by Sheen himself and by Isabella Gellis.