CD: 808 State - Transmission Suite

First album in 17 years from Mancunian electronic innovators is an engaging retro-futurist ear-journey

Prior to the UK dance music explosion of summer 1988, house and techno were American micro-scenes, geographically restricted to Chicago, Detroit and New York. Small coteries showed interest in the UK, but few thought of making the stuff. Mancunian producers 808 State, however, were early adopters, recording an album that year and later charting with iconic 1989 hit “Pacific State”, a futuristic, Balearic instrumental.

Bavouzet, Manchester Camerata, Takács-Nagy, Stoller Hall, Manchester, review - concertos as opera

Drama takes the stage in characterful views of Mozart

Manchester Camerata’s series of in-concert recordings featuring Mozart piano concertos with Jean-Efflam Bavouzet is well under way now, and this programme, like others before it, included a couple of his opera overtures too. Why so?

Ólafsson, Hallé, Mäkelä, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review - exciting new faces

★★★★ ÓLAFSSON, HALLÉ, MÄKELÄ, BRIDGEWATER HALL, MANCHESTER Exciting new faces

Nordic duo’s impressive start to the 2019-20 season

The Hallé Orchestra has a good track record when it comes to bringing in young talents with exciting prospects, and its 2019-20 season begins with the newly appointed Finnish chief conductor designate of the Oslo Philharmonic, Klaus Mäkelä, on the rostrum, and the young Icelander Víkungur Ólafsson as solo pianist.

Manchester International Piano Competition, Chetham’s review - stars in the making

★★★★ MANCHESTER INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION Stars in the making

Gifted young soloists show their worth in concerto performances

The Manchester International Piano Competition produced three outstanding performances over the two evenings of its finals: the winner of the first prize was Ilia Lomtatidze, from Georgia, with second prize awarded jointly to the Italian and French pianists Luca Grianti and Oscar Colliar.

Selina Todd: Tastes of Honey review – Salford dreams of freedom

★★★★ SELINA TODD: TASTES OF HONEY The life and legacy of Shelagh Delaney

The life and legacy of Shelagh Delaney, artistic godmother to Corrie – and The Smiths

In the late 1950s, a photo technician from Salford suddenly became “the most famous teenager in Britain”. Shelagh Delaney was 19 when she sent the script of A Taste of Honey to the radical director Joan Littlewood. Within a matter of weeks, in May 1958, Theatre Royal Stratford East had staged it – sensationally, to a welcome that mixed bouquets and brickbats. The fearless youngster from the cosmopolitan slum neighbourhood of Ordsall had already begun “to change the way working-class women are treated and represented in Britain”.

Prom 37: The Childhood of Christ, Hallé, Pascal/ Prom 38: Bach Cantatas, Solomon's Knot reviews - holy radiance great and small

★★★★ PROMS 37 & 38: THE CHILDHOOD OF CHRIST, HALLÉ, PASCAL/ BACH CANTATAS, SOLOMON'S KNOT Holy radiance great and small

Berlioz's gentle miracle shimmers and Bach celebrations resound in an unlikely setting

Berlioz's most intimate oratorio certainly isn't just for Christmas – but, given its scale, is it right for the Proms? Certainly in anniversary year we'd hoped for something bigger: the Requiem, turned to mush earlier this year in St Paul's Cathedral, could have been made for the Albert Hall, with brass bands placed at the four points of the compass.

Prom 23: Floristán, BBC Philharmonic, Gernon review - concerto lacks heft

Young British conductor impresses but the end product proves fallible

Ben Gernon is only 30 (and looks about ten years younger) but has been Principal Guest Conductor of the BBC Philharmonic since 2017. He really impressed in last night’s Prom but, after an exciting overture, things fell away a bit with an under-nourished Rachmaninov concerto and an enjoyable if not faultless second half of Tchaikovsky.

Tao of Glass, Royal Exchange, Manchester review - brilliant, enchanting tales fascinate

★★★★ TAO OF GLASS, MANCHESTER INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL Enchanting tales fascinate

Phelim McDermott's show about the bits that were left over

Who would have thought that a one-narrator show, mainly about projects that never got off the ground, would turn out to be such a satisfying evening’s entertainment?

Elbow and New Order, Lucca Summer Festival review – a meeting of Mancunian minds?

★★★★★ ELBOW / NEW ORDER, LUCCA SUMMER FESTIVAL A spectacular night in Tuscany

Much-loved bands at the opposite end of the pop spectrum magic up a spectacular night

Thirty-three years ago, at Manchester's Festival of the Tenth Summer, I fumed that New Order had been given top billing over The Smiths, much to the mirth of a couple of reviewers of this very parish. History has proved me wrong, obviously. So, to Italy, and a modest-sized and relatively modern piazza (Napoleonic) in beguiling, ancient Lucca. To see two of Manchester’s most revered bands.