Der Freischütz, Bavarian State Opera online review – marksmen as marketeers

★★★★ DER FREISCHUTZ, BAVARIAN STATE OPERA Marksmen as marketeers

Tcherniakov’s staging heightens the psychological drama, but his feminist angle falls flat

Bavarian State Opera has led the way for live performances and associated broadcasts during the pandemic. Their series of weekly “Montagsstück” events have presented innovative chamber operas, specifically for web streaming. Their next goal is full-size opera with a live audience. That is not possible yet, so instead they are premiering a new production of Weber’s Der Freischütz. Initially it is just for the cameras, but when the doors finally open, it will be ready to go.

Blu-ray/DVD : The Tin Drum

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: THE TIN DRUM A dark and comic vision of Germany's past

A dark and comic vision of Germany's past

Volker Schlöndorff’s brilliant adaptation of Günter Grass’s 1959 novel The Tin Drum hasn’t aged one bit: just as the book and film’s main character Oskar Matzerath decides that it’s better not to grow old, the film’s phenomenal zest feels as fresh today as when it was won the Palme d’Or in Cannes  and Best Foreign Film Oscar in 1979.

Blu-ray: Waxworks (1924)

★★★★ BLU-RAY: WAXWORKS (1924) Paul Leni's German Expressionist horror comedy

The sum is more than the parts of Paul Leni's German Expressionist horror comedy

Stylistically, Waxworks (1924) was the apogee of German Expressionist cinema in that it was the last pure distillation of the form, in which visual distortion, chiaroscuro, exaggerated staccato acting, and nightmarish atmosphere collectively evoked the angst-ridden German collective consciousness in the early years of the Weim

First Person: Cellist Alban Gerhardt on why concert-hall life must go on

FIRST PERSON: CELLIST ALBAN GERHARDT Why concert-hall life must go on

The return to lockdown of German musical institutions must not happen here

With horror I heard on Wednesday that the proud cultural nation of Germany, which invests probably more money per capita in its concert, opera and theatre life than any other country in the world, had decided to close down what I as a German citizen am particularly proud of - precisely this rich cultural life.

Richard J Evans: The Hitler Conspiracies review – Nazi myths debunked

A scrupulous, timely study of the Third Reich's post-truth afterlife

In the days when crowds still thronged airport bookshops, any work entitled The Hitler Conspiracies would surely leap off the shelves. This one ought to flourish in our more immobile times – not least because it unpicks twisted ways of thinking that stretch far beyond the legacy of the Third Reich and its leader. Sir Richard Evans, the Cambridge historian and Hitler-era specialist who supported fellow-academic Deborah Lipstadt in her landmark court victory over the Holocaust-denying writer David Irving, led a five-year research programme on “Conspiracy and Democracy”.

theartsdesk in Hamburg: Ghost Light - a ballet in the time of corona

★★★★ THEARTSDESK IN HAMBURG: GHOST LIST A ballet in the time of corona

How the city is showing the world a way through the live-performance impasse

So the Royal Ballet is to make a live comeback, for one night only, on 9 October. Fielding the entire company of 100 dancers, suitably distanced, the enterprise is being hailed as a triumph of logistics. And so it is. But the fact remains that the vast majority of its audience will be watching on a computer screen at home. And the gala programme will be pulled from the company’s back catalogue, health precautions having apparently ruled out the possibility of making anything new since March.

Alban Gerhardt, Markus Becker, Wigmore Hall review - long shadows and rich sounds

★★★★ ALBAN GERHARDT, MARKUS BECKER, WIGMORE HALL Shostakovich's dark intensity carries over to Schumann and Beethoven

Shostakovich's dark intensity carries over to Schumann and Beethoven

It wouldn’t be true to say I’d forgotten what a solo cello in a fine concert hall sounds like; revelation of an admittedly sparse year will undoubtedly remain Sumera’s Cello Concerto played by young Estonian Theodor Sink at the Pärnu Music Festival in July.

Album: Conrad Schnitzler & Frank Bretschneider - Con-Struct

Complete abstraction engenders a bizarre sense of familiarity

When does the avant-garde become folk? Both of the participants in this album have certainly been on the very cutting edge of sound-making, on multiple occasions. Conrad Schnitzler was a student of radical artist Joseph Beuys and leading light in the utopian thinking and radical soundmaking of 1970s West Germany as a member of Tangerine Dream and Kluster.

'Artists' online rivalry feels stronger': pianist Joseph Moog on the difficulties of performing in lockdown

PIANIST JOSEPH MOOG on the difficulties of performing in lockdown

Fascinating interpreter of Liszt and others on where musicians find themselves now

It can be found in any contract. Both artists, as well as promoters, are aware of it, but it used to be an exception so rare that only a few have ever experienced it: the clause of "force majeure". Now it is sadly commonplace in the world of the performing arts.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Hans-Joachim Roedelius - Tape Archive Essence 1973-1978

HANS-JOACHIM ROEDELIUS - TAPE ARCHIVE ESSENCE 1973-1978 Essential home recordings from the German musical auteur

Essential home recordings from the German musical auteur

Even though nothing on Tape Archive Essence 1973–1978 was released at the time it was recorded, every track evokes material which was issued. Any fan of the German legends Cluster and Harmonia needs this album gathering extracts from tapes key member Hans-Joachim Roedelius recorded on his own during the period when both outfits were active.