theartsdesk at the Verbier Festival 2016

THEARTSDESK AT THE VERBIER FESTIVAL 2016 One-off hits and misses: what a festival's all about

One-off hits and misses: what a festival's all about

Idyllic setting, star-rated musicians, the sense of an occasion. Verbier so wholly fulfils the clichés of an international music festival that to the cynical it can seem complacent or arrogant in doing so. To the uninitiated – and this was my first visit to the Monaco of the Mountains – there is more than a sprinkling of magic about the sheer implausibility of the place.

Campo Sancho 2016

CAMPO SANCHO 2016 Sancho Panza brought the bass bins from Notting Hill to bucolic Hertfordshire for a proper party

Sancho Panza brought the bass bins from Notting Hill to bucolic Hertfordshire for a proper party

“Ooooh, it’s gorgeous!” exclaimed my wife-to-be as we arrived at what had been described as “an oasis in Hertfordshire.” They weren’t kidding, either. The site for the inaugural festival organised by Notting Hill Carnival stalwarts Sancho Panza couldn’t have been more different from West London if it tried. In place of terraced houses there were wall-to-wall trees, the only flyover was the sound of planes headed for Luton across an open sky.

Standon Calling: Suede/Jess Glynne/Anna Calvi

A super-sized manor house garden party with a real feel for good new music

For anyone who suffers from FIFOMO (festival-induced-fear-of-missing-out), Standon Calling is ideal. It’s like a pocket-sized version of Latitude, borrowing the Big Top and the mix of modern music with nostalgic pop acts, or Wilderness, borrowing the purple domed stage, the need for hot tubs and gastronimical treats. It has the feel of an epic house party, being set in the grounds of a 16th-century manor house 30 miles north of London.

Camp Bestival 2016

CAMP BESTIVAL 2016 Top space-themed family-friendly barney pulls the rabbit out of the hat

Top space-themed family-friendly barney pulls the rabbit out of the hat

Camp Bestival, curated by DJ Rob da Bank, has taken place at Lulworth Castle in Dorset since 2008. It’s now an institution of sorts, rammed to the gills with ageing ravers pulling around colourfully decorated trollies and paying over the odds for “reimagined Eritrean street food” and the like. It is, as I’ve written many times before, the Waitrose of festivals but that’s no bad thing. An easy-to-ridicule, surface middle-classness masks a haven where parents and children can enjoy the wild, colourful, surrealist carnival of festival-land together, as well as a plethora of good music.

WOMAD 2016, Charlton Park

WOMAD 2016, CHARLTON PARK The celebrated world music festival returns in an almost vintage year for global sounds

The celebrated world music festival returns in an almost vintage year for global sounds

Nestling amid the area in the woods where they have the gong baths and the kora-makers and back massages was an art installation by Graeme Miller - basically, you lay back on a trolley while an intern/elf pushed you through the woods while you ponder the underside of leaves and the sky. WOMAD does give you a different perspective anyway - a welcome respite from post-Brexit, pre-Trump xenophobia - and as a live celebration of global musical treasures it remains unmatched.

theartsdesk at the Pärnu Music Festival 2016

 

THEARTSDESK IN PÄRNU Great orchestral playing by the sea in Estonia

A love-letter to the greatest orchestral playing in a perfect Estonian seaside town

Where would you go to hear the most electrifying and collegial orchestral playing in the world? It used to be Lucerne while Claudio Abbado was alive. Now that the Lucerne Festival Orchestra has become like any classy superband, the answer is Pärnu in the south of Estonia.

theartsdesk at the Montreal Jazz Festival

THEARTSDESK AT THE MONTREAL JAZZ FESTIVAL Mainline jazz, roots, and global sounds abound in the planet's biggest jazzfest

Mainline jazz, roots, and global sounds abound in the planet's biggest jazzfest

The Montréal International Jazz Festival's 37th edition presented its accustomed surfeit of gigs, covering the complete range from concert hall spectaculars to small club sessions. A large part of this, the globe's biggest jazzfest, is the massive-scale freebie shows on various outdoor stages. The festival completely takes over Montréal's downtown centre, which just happens to be this French-speaking city’s cultural area.

theartsdesk in the Faroe Islands: G! Festival 2016

THEARTSDESK IN THE FAROE ISLANDS: G! FESTIVAL 2016 A sense of communion at the North Atlantic festival where rain never stops play

A sense of communion at the North Atlantic festival where rain never stops play

Familiar words pepper the lead item on the 9am radio news: "Brexit", "Theresa May", "Boris Johnson". Yet the bulletin is delivered in the first language of the 49,000-population Faroe Islands. The self-governing region of Denmark may be a remote cluster of 18 North Atlantic islands, but the Britain-watching contagion has spread to a place which has never been a member of the EU. Denmark is. The Faroes aren't.

The Golden Dragon, Music Theatre Wales, Buxton Festival

THE GOLDEN DRAGON, MUSIC THEATRE WALES, BUXTON FESTIVAL Peter Eötvös's new opera finds a world in a grain of egg fried rice

Peter Eötvös's new opera finds a world in a grain of egg fried rice

It’s the kitchen of a Thai-Chinese-Vietnamese fast food restaurant. The onstage orchestra wear sweatbands and T-shirts, and a red work surface stretches across the stage. As the four chefs take the stage, the clatter of pans and knives is first noise, then a rhythm, then an overture of sizzling, clanging, chopping and hissing sounds that spreads throughout the whole orchestra. Vegetables are sliced, pans brandished and, sitting out front, as an escaped slice of courgette rolls wonkily downstage, is a young Chinese cook, wailing with toothache.

theartsdesk at the Edinburgh International Film Festival 2016

EDINBURGH INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL Little pomp but plenty of eclectic entertainment

Little pomp but plenty of eclectic entertainment at the EIFF's 70th edition

Even without any particular pomp or focus for celebration, the 70th Edinburgh International Film Festival has felt like a particularly strong and broad-ranging one, with a programme so big it was a struggle to take it all in.