First Person: Kings Place Artistic and Executive Director Helen Wallace on a year of 'Sound Unwrapped'

'A wild swim through celestial sounds': this year's innovative programme runs the gamut

2023 is surely the year the performing arts reach peak "immersive", a word endangered by its own ubiquity. From Punchdrunk’s Burnt City to Danny Boyle’s The Matrix we are promised a swallowing-up by art. Kings Cross is the location for two visual and aural initiatives: David Hockney’s 3D Bigger & Closer at the Lightroom, and Sound Unwrapped at Kings Place, a year-long series of intimate, immersive events kindled by live performance.

Watts, BBCSO, Wigglesworth, Barbican review - clarity, control and focus

★★★★ WATTS, BBCSO, WIGGLESWORTH, BARBICAN A major new song cycle, distinctive Mahler

A major new song cycle, and distinctive Mahler

Ryan Wigglesworth is a man of many talents. He has recently been appointed Chief Conductor of the BBC Scottish Symphony, but he is also a versatile opera conductor, and an operatic sensibility is clear in the musical personality he projects.

Yevgeny Sudbin, World Heart Beat Embassy Gardens review - phenomenal pianism in close-up

★ YEVGENY SUDBIN, WORLD HEART BEAT EMBASSY GARDENS Phenomenal pianism in close-up

A recital with contrast and balance

It was a rare treat to hear Yevgeny Sudbin’s piano artistry quite so close up. World Heart Beat Embassy Gardens is a new venue, in fact just in the process of being born (more about the venue lower down). In the room, with its seated capacity of just 120 on two levels, the sound is so clear and immediate, you could sometimes almost be inside the piano.

Lowe, The Mozartists, Page, Wigmore Hall - an education, not quite a triumph

★ LOWE, THE MOZARTISTS, PAGE, WIGMORE HALL An education, not quite a triumph

Curate’s-egg focus on the year 1773 finds first-rate performers sometimes in trouble

Ian Page’s “journey of a lifetime” with his Mozartists, taking the greatest genius year by year, lands us in 1773 with the adolescent Mozart's first durable crowdpleaser, the pretty-brilliant motet for soprano and orchestra Exsultate, jubilate (last night was its 250th anniversary). The boy wonder still needs annual support from his elders, though, and as usual we got more than just a sampler of what else was going on musically in that year.

Faust, Tamestit, EBS, Gardiner, St Martin-in-the-Fields review - countless shades of brilliant

★★★★★ FAUST, TAMESTIT, EBS, GARDINER, ST-MARTIN-IN-THE-FIELDS Two great communicative soloists up the joy factor of an already dazzling evening

Two great communicative soloists up the joy factor of an already dazzling evening

Haydn and Mozart symphonies from John Eliot Gardiner and his English Baroque Soloists are bound, at the very least, to be high, lucid and bright. Last night the X-factor was there too, and trebled in a surely unsurpassable account of Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante for violin, viola and orchestra by two of the world’s most communicative soloists, Isabelle Faust and Antoine Tamestit.

Benedetti, Hallé, Elder, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review - essays in transparency

★★★★ BENEDETTI, HALLE, ELDER, BRIDGEWATER HALL Essays in transparency

Taking Szymanowski's Second Violin Concerto to a near-capacity house

Nicola Benedetti and Sir Mark Elder are both in the enviable position of being able to take audiences with them into music territory that might scare some away. So it was a gratifyingly near-capacity house that heard Szymanowski’s Second Violin Concerto last night as – on the first occasion they have worked together – they presented it to the Hallé audience.

First Person: Royal Academy of Music Principal Jonathan Freeman-Attwood on why a conservatoire should make recordings

25 years and 50 recordings on, an experienced producer on students and the studio

Why is it important for a music conservatoire to make recordings? What is the educational context? These are questions we have continued to reflect upon at the Royal Academy of Music – celebrating its bicentenary this year – since we took our first steps towards what has become an established and invigorating part of Academy life.

Mithras Trio, Wigmore Hall review - exhilarating, highly-toned performance

★★★★ MITHRAS TRIO, WIGMORE HALL Exhilarating, highly-toned performance

A real sense of elemental energy, as if we were next to a turbulent sea

The adrenalin was in full flow yesterday lunchtime at the Wigmore Hall as the dynamic young Mithras Trio delivered a vigorous, toned performance featuring Beethoven, Bridge and an electrifying new work by Joy Lisney. The trio, who have been together for just over five years, are part of Radio 3’s New Generation Artists scheme and dispatched the repertoire with an intensity and expressive range that was often as beguiling as it was exhilarating.

National Youth Orchestra, Bloch, Barbican review - blazing and surging odysseys

★★★★★ NATIONAL YOUTH ORCHESTRA, BLOCH, BARBICAN Blazing and surging odysseys

Anna Clyne does melody alongside razor-sharp Britten and ecstatic Strauss

In precarious times, musical wonders never seem to cease – for now, at least. Who would have thought during lockdown that we’d be back so soon and so frequently to the kind of massive orchestra needed to play a cosmic blockbuster like Richard Strauss's Also sprach Zarathustra? Of the three live performances I’ve heard since September 2021, last night’s, the biggest and youngest (160 players aged 14 to 19), was also the freshest and most exciting.