Vengerov, London Symphony Orchestra, Ticciati, Barbican Hall

VENGEROV, LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, TICCIATI, BARBICAN HALL Youth gets a medal, Elgar's Enigma Variations reveal universal genius and a great violinist goes off piste

Youth gets a medal, Elgar's Enigma Variations reveal universal genius and a great violinist goes off piste

Her Majesty was making a rare concert-hall appearance to present the Queen’s Medal for Music, and any little Englanders in the audience might have been tempted to link royalty to Elgar’s Enigma Variations. But conductor Robin Ticciati, with a generosity and wisdom beyond his 29 years, raised this orchestral masterpiece to the universal level it deserves. Elgar’s "friends pictured within" trod air and revealed every aspect of their often shy, beautiful souls.

Kavakos, London Symphony Orchestra, Bychkov, Barbican Hall

KAVAKOS, LSO, BYCHKOV, BARBICAN From austerity to rambunctiousness all the way to triumph in a memorable outing for the LSO

From austerity to rambunctiousness all the way to triumph in a memorable outing for the LSO

Leonidas Kavakos was originally meant to be premiering a concerto by Argentinian composer Oswaldo Golijov, which had also been scheduled for Berlin in 2011 and subsequently for Los Angeles in May this year. The composer missed both those deadlines and the work apparently remains uncompleted – it was replaced on the programme by the Berg concerto.

Jansen, London Symphony Orchestra, Gergiev, Barbican

JANSEN, LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, GERGIEV, BARBICAN A glorious start to the LSO's Szymanowski retrospective

A glorious start to the LSO's Szymanowski retrospective

Janine Jansen had every right to be nervous. The last time most of us saw the London Symphony Orchestra the audience spent the whole time laughing at their star soloist. But then Mr Bean has a very different skill set to Jansen. She's able to journey with silken smoothness across the musical stratosphere for what seems like eternity. He's able to blow his nose while playing the piano with the end of an umbrella. That said, one could have imagined Jansen's performance of Szymanowski's First Violin Concerto provoking laughter, but only from a sense of awe and astonishment.

Classical CDs Weekly: Cage, Sibelius, Stravinsky, Smaro Gregoriadou

CLASSICAL CDS WEEKLY: CAGE, SIBELIUS, STRAVINSKY, SMARO GREGORIADOU Prepared piano from John Cage, baroque guitar and a telegenic conductor in his prime

Prepared piano from John Cage, baroque guitar and a telegenic conductor in his prime

 

John Cage: As Is Alexei Lubimov (piano, prepared piano), Natalia Pschenitschnikova (voice) (ECM)

Barbican Centre, 2012-13 Season

Autumn listings at the London arts venue



The autumn 2012 season at the Barbican Centre offers an international history of photography, Juliette Binoche in Strindberg, a train packed with African music, a festival of ecstatic, devotional and psychedelic music, and a film made by London schoolgirls about Bosnia, as well as classical music from the LSO and two new associate ensembles.



Swing Symphony, Barbican

SWING SYMPHONY, BARBICAN From charleston to bebop, a triumphant UK premiere of Wynton Marsalis's sprawling new work

From charleston to bebop, a triumphant UK premiere of Wynton Marsalis's sprawling Swing Symphony

The UK premiere of Wynton Marsalis's Swing Symphony (Symphony No 3) last night was extraordinary on several counts. We heard, first and foremost, a real dialogue between jazz band and orchestra. Not one of those fist-bitingly cornball jazz arrangements where the jazz players get to stretch out and the orchestral players sit back and contribute the sustained, saccharine harmonies. This was a genuine coming together where all hands contributed equally to the rhythmic, harmonic and melodic detail of the work.

Four Brits among 20 shortlisted for conducting competition

Donatella Flick/London Symphony Orchestra competition climaxes at Barbican

Twenty young conductors have been shortlisted to compete in the Donatella Flick/London Symphony Orchestra Conducting Competition in late September. The top prize is a cash award of £15,000 and an attachment to the LSO as Assistant Conductor.

The 20 comprise four from the UK - Joolz Gale, Ben Gernon, Jonathan Lo and Gemma New - Irishmen Daniel Stewart and Robert Tuohy, three from Spain, two each from Italy, France, Greece and Germany, a Hungarian, an Austrian and a Portuguese.

London Symphony Orchestra, Tilson Thomas, Barbican Hall

The American conductor is as subtle as ever in Mahler's Titan symphony

Right, notebooks out everyone. Michael Tilson Thomas began this Berg/Mahler double-header with a lengthy analysis of what we were about to hear in the former’s Chamber Concerto. Whether it was informative or not (and it was), it was a bit of a spoiler. It was nice to know exactly which themes are attributed to which dedicatee, but you couldn’t help but feel the surprises in the work have been somewhat spiked by this little lecture. Still, selected LSO folk and the effective duo of Yefim Bronfman on piano and Gil Shaham on violin were on hand to try and surprise us anyway.