CBSO Chorus, Czech Philharmonic, Bychkov, Barbican review - a mass of life
Impossible to imagine more nuanced, dazzling performances of Dvořák and Janáček
One of the world’s top five orchestras – sorry, but I locate them all in continental Europe – played on the second night of its London visit to a half-empty Barbican Hall. Half-full, rather, attentive and ecstatic. As for the much-criticised venue, which I’ve always been able to live with, playing as fine as this shows that you don’t need a state-of-the-art auditorium to make the most beautiful sounds.
Classical CDs: Pealing bells, abandoned ballrooms and abrasive brass
Obscure Americana unearthed, plus Baroque keyboard music and a visit to the gallery
Americascapes – music by Loeffler, Ruggles, Hanson and Cowell Basque National Orchestra/Robert Trevino (Ondine)
Colli, Bournemouth SO, Scaglione, Lighthouse, Poole review - drama and romance
Spontaneity caught on the wing in inspirational live performances
The Drama and Romance of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra’s promotional hook for this concert signalled a heady musical mix. Appropriate for the stark contrasts of mood central to Wagner’s Tannhäuser Overture and Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4, but potentially less so for Dvorák’s Symphony No. 8 that casts barely a cloud to compromise its predominantly sunny G major disposition shared with the outer movements of the Beethoven.
Sheku Kanneh-Mason, RLPO, Hindoyan, BBC Proms review - wood magic and swashbuckling show-offs
The cellist meditates, the Liverpudlian orchestra lets rip with its lively new chief conductor
After 14 years as principal conductor, Vasily Petrenko has left the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra in top-league shape. The players must be as thrilled as we are that his successor, Venezuelan Armenian Domingo Hindoyan, carries the flame, catches the spark, call it what you will, with a distinct personality of his own, combining clariy and elegance in baton-wielding with a very watchable physical freedom.
Isserlis, LPO, Elder, Southbank Centre online review – songs of life and death
Lesser-known Czech passions preface a beloved old favourite
The Southbank Centre automatically stuck the trusty “Bohemian Rhapsodies” headline on this London Philharmonic Orchestra concert of Czech music streamed from the still-deserted Royal Festival Hall. Given Janáček’s presence on the bill, they should have made that “Moravian” as well. I know – get a life.
Kaleidoscope Collective, Wigmore Hall online – playing with panache, as if to a live audience
A blazing masterpiece and a personality-filled rarity provide an hour of sheer pleasure
If it all comes across as vividly as this on screen, imagine what it would have been like to witness in person. Which quite a few of us very nearly did, until we had to be disinvited owing to changed government guidelines.
Czech Philharmonic Benefit Concert online review – profound musicianship in sombre masked fundraiser
Three violinists, two cellists, four pianists and a harpist play superbly to an empty hall
Less than six months ago Prague’s most prestigious concert hall, the neo-Renaissance Rudolfinum, was all glittering lights and packed, smartly dressed audience for the Czech Philharmonic’s hot ticket first performance there for 49 years of its national epic, Smetana’s Má vlast (My Homeland) – a grand one indeed under principal conductor Semyon Bychkov.
Classical CDs Weekly: Coates, Dvořák, Martinů, Peñalosa
British light music, two Czech piano concertos and sacred sounds from 16th century Spain
Eric Coates: Orchestral Works, Vol. 1 BBC Philharmonic/John Wilson (Chandos)
London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, Ono, Barbican review - feet on the ground, eyes to the skies
Solo vocal, choral and orchestral trumpets blaze in Janáček's Glagolitic Mass
We have John Eliot Gardiner to thank for an unconventional diptych of Czech masterpieces in the London Symphony Orchestra's current season. He had to withdraw from last night's concert - he conducts Dvořák's Cello Concerto and Suk's "Asrael" Symphony on Thursday - but his replacement, Kazushi Ono, was no second-best.