Judy Collins, Grand Central Hall, Liverpool review - how sweet the sound, even at 80

★★★★★ JUDY COLLINS, LIVERPOOL How sweet the sound, even at 80

A consummate musician takes a trip down the foggy ruins of time

It’s a good few years since Judy Collins last toured Britain and Ireland, though in the US she’s rarely off the road. Over the last couple of years she has notched up more than 100 concerts (and an album) with Stephen Stills, who famously celebrated their 1960s love affair in the magnificent “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes”. Her latest album, Winter Stories, with Jonas Field and Chatham County Line, had American critics reaching for superlatives and put her in the charts once more.

Albums of the Year 2019: Sharon Van Etten - Remind Me Tomorrow

A sound reminiscent of days gone by but with a shoegazy sway that keeps it relevant

2019 has been quite the year. Amongst other difficulties being a grown-up hurls at you on the reg, I lost my guiding light (may her adventures on the other side of this universe be everything and more). And the testing times that ensued sees me now, not only into the new decade but into a big fat birthday that ends with a "0".

Albums of the Year 2019: Claire Martin - Believin’ It

Award-winning vocalist touches the heart and lifts the soul

A trio of standout US vocal jazz releases included one of the year’s most hotly anticipated albums, Jazzmeia Horn’s Love and Liberation, which showcased the Dallas-born vocalist’s ever-deepening artistry and songwriter’s ear for detail. Horn’s eight originals encapsulated the sense of joyousness, playfulness and vitality that course through her music.

Albums of the Year 2019: Josienne Clarke – In All Weather

ALBUMS OF THE YEAR 2019 - JOSIENNE CLARKE - IN ALL WEATHER A perfect companion for the longer, darker nights

A perfect companion for the longer, darker nights of your year

As one half of the BBC Radio 2 Folk Award-winning duo with Ben Walker, Josienne Clarke released four superb albums, including 2014’s Nothing Can Bring Back The Hour and their finale, 2018’s Seedlings All. There’s an absolute clarity to her voice, as if it's some lucid if troubled body of water through which you can see to the depths, and the powerful forces unfolding down there.

Steeleye Span, Barbican review - party like it's 1969

★★★★ STEELEYE SPAN, BARBICAN Party like it's 1969

Celebrating 50 years with a strong new album in 'Est'd 69' and special guests from the band's past

The Barbican, a week before Christmas, and it’s British folk-rock legends Steeleye Span’s last gig of the year, a year in which its vigorous seven-strong line-up – featuring a new recruit in the shape of former Bellowheader Benji Kirkpatrick – celebrated a half century of Span by releasing a strong new album in Est’d 69.

The Lumineers, SSE Hydro, Glasgow review - a stomping but exhausting night

The Denver band were at ease before a large crowd, but offered a familiar sounding set

There was something fitting about the Lumineers entrance in Glasgow. As “Gimme Shelter” blared around the SSE Hydro, lights pulsating over the crowd, it was drummer Jeremiah Fraites who took the stage and started the opening beat of “Sleep On The Floor”, an array of phones quickly whipped out to act as a welcoming committee from the crowd. The rest of the band followed in due course, but this is a group for whom the drums are at the heart of their stomping songs, no matter what.

Mrs Peachum's Guide to Love and Marriage, Mid Wales Opera review - scaled down seediness, with a swing

★★★★ MRS PEACHUM'S GUIDE TO LOVE AND MARRIAGE, MID WALES OPERA Scaled down seediness with a swing

Toxic femininity takes centre stage in the outrageous essence of The Beggar's Opera

The Beggar’s Opera: does any piece of music theatre promise more fun and deliver more tedium? Yes, it was the satirical smash of 1728; yes, it inspired Brecht and Weill; yes, with its combination of popular melodies and a topical script it was effectively the world’s first jukebox musical. I get all that.

Poster, Cabeza, Aurora Orchestra, Collon, Kings Place review – shock of the new

Musical quests through city and country for the roots of the modern

Mozart’s piano concertos often overflow with good humour, but you seldom expect to hear a hearty chuckle from the audience in the middle of a performance of one. Yet something close to a guffaw burst out around King’s Place when soloist Tom Poster, deep into the last-movement cadenza of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 19 in F major, suddenly quoted Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue. Poster had played the Gershwin before the interval of this typically smart, eclectic and thought-provoking programme from the Aurora Orchestra under Nicholas Collon.

Hubro 10th-Anniversary Concert, The Spice of Life review – boundary pushing Norwegian label marks its birthday

Building Instrument, Bushman’s Revenge and the Erlend Apneseth Trio celebrate their imprint’s first decade

A fiddle projects upwards from between Erlend Apneseth’s knees. Seated, he holds another in his right hand facing-off the instruments against each other. He’s plucking both, the pizzicato pitter-patter suggesting water drops on a bell or a koto. On the other side of the stage, guitarist Stephan Meidell is looping the sound, treating it to form a wash akin to that of a waterfall. In between, percussionist Øyvind Hegg-Lunde is behind a drum kit rattling and scraping what looks like a cheese grater attached to some allen keys.