Classical Music/Opera direct to home 12 - partying at a distance

CLASSICAL MUSIC / OPERA DIRECT TO HOME 12 Festivals cope with live online events

Festivals cope with live online events and past fare

What would have been the festival season starts around now. Some organisations are offering mementos of past glories; others, especially in countries where the lockdown has been relaxed to a greater extent than is possible in the UK, are managing to assemble some of their artists in audience-free auditoriums, playng and singing to you online. All are under varying degrees of financial stress and many may not relaunch; help where you can with donations every now and then.



Bergen International Festival

New Music Lockdown 5: Foals, Claptone, Luke La Volpe, Minecraft's music festival and more

NEW MUSIC LOCKDOWN 5 Foals, Claptone, Luke La Volpe, Minecraft's music festival and more

Five spanking new stay-at-home music recommendations for this week

Way into lockdown now and, as the music world adjusts, so what artists are attempting becomes, in some cases, more sophisticated. In others, many impressively make the most of whatever tech they have to hand. Either way it’s always fascinating to check in on the best that’s out there. Below is this week’s pick. Dive in!

Foals’ FBC Transmissions

Tectonics Rewind, BBCSSO review - new music festival revisits past gems

★★★★ TECTONICS REWIND, BBCSSO New music festival revisits past gems

Digital delights abound in this expertly curated online festival

As Covid-19 puts a halt to live events around the world, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra has delivered its annual festival of new music, Tectonics, online, with a selection of recordings from past performances.

One World: Together at Home livestream review - all eight hours of it!

ONE WORLD: TOGETHER AT HOME Festival-friendly hedonist Caspar Gomez does the full eight hours of lockdown action

Theartsdesk's festival-friendly hedonist, Caspar Gomez, does the full eight hours of lockdown action

What times. They cancelled Glastonbury. Festival season 2020 disappeared. Then certain potions and compounds associated with festivaling ran dry. Well, the latter exist, of course. There’s a fellow over the road who’s still selling talcum powder and stinking chemo-skunk from his porch.

Berlinale 2020: Never Rarely Sometimes Always review - raw and unflinching abortion drama hits home

Plus Abel Ferrara's Jungian nightmare and Decker's shrieking 'Shirley'

Back in 2017, writer-director Eliza Hittman won over audiences with her beautiful coming-of-age drama Beach Rats. Her latest film, Never Rarely Sometimes Always, is a more quietly devastating drama, shifting the focus away from sexual awakenings to a more politically charged arena.

Brighton Festival 2020 launches with Guest Director Lemn Sissay

BRIGHTON FESTIVAL 2020 Launches with Guest Director Lemn Sissay

The Sussex extravaganza announces its 2020 theme and line-up of events

This morning the largest annual, curated multi-arts festival in England launched and announced its programme of events. With Guest Director, British and Ethiopian poet-playwright-broadcaster Lemn Sissay, MBE, at the helm, Brighton Festival 2020 is themed as Imagine Nation and runs May 2-24. For the seventh year running, theartsdesk will be a major media partner, showcasing preview interviews and reviewing the best of the festival.

theartsdesk in Aalborg: Northern Winter Beat 2020 review

THEARTSDESK IN AALBORG: NORTHERN WINTER BEAT Australian retro-futurists, a Dutch lute player and Finnish noise-niks rub shoulders in northern Denmark

Australian retro-futurists, a Dutch lute player and Finnish noise-niks rub shoulders in northern Denmark

U-Bahn’s second-ever live show outside their home country Australia took place in Aalborg, in Jutland, in the north of Denmark. They were in this congenial, routinely rain-sodden city last weekend for Northern Winter Beat, the annual festival of established, offbeat and up-and-coming musical adventurers.

Celtic Connections 2020, Glasgow review - Yorkston/Thorne/Khan and Roaming Roots Revue celebrate joy of collaboration

Two standout performances get to the heart of Glasgow's midwinter festival

While there’s usually something for everybody on the Celtic Connections festival programme, where Glasgow’s midwinter festival tends to shine is in its collaborations and special events.

Albums of the Year 2019: The Chemical Brothers - No Geography

★★★★★ ALBUMS OF THE YEAR 2019: THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS - NO GEOGRAPHY Barnstorming album offers uplift during a year of terminal shodiness

Barnstorming album offers uplift during a year of terminal shoddiness

It was hard avoid bleak in 2019. Then the election hit and everything went off a cliff. Watching the world turn to a shit-bowl of ignorance and greed, the raging nihilism of the year’s key film, Joker, suddenly seemed appealing. The 2020s will be about a response, clearly, but in the meantime spirits need lifting. The album that has served that purpose round my way since its release in April has been No Geography by The Chemical Brothers.

theartsdesk at the Tsinandali Festival: young Caucasians join hands and instruments

World-class chamber players and young orchestras on a Georgian country estate

Two hours' drive from Tbilisi over a beautiful mountain pass, lushly wooded on the descent, the Tsinandali Estate has been central to Georgia's wine-growing district of Kakheti since poet-prince Prince Alexander Chavchavadze produced the first bottle in 1841.