Gabetta, NHK SO, Järvi, RFH review - transparency and dynamism

★★★★ GABETTA, NHK SO, JÄRVI, RFH Dynamic, transparent Schumann and Rachmaninov

Japan’s flagship ensemble brings clarity and focus under its powerful chief conductor

This concert represented the British leg of the NHK Symphony Orchestra’s European tour. Tokyo’s radio orchestra is Japan’s flagship ensemble, and they are fine advocates for the country’s thriving musical culture, the playing precise and the tone focused. Paavo Järvi is the orchestra’s Chief Conductor and a good fit for the orchestra’s sound. Järvi takes a similarly focused approach, expressive but never extrovert.

Preludes, Southwark Playhouse review - journeying into the mind of Rachmaninoff

★★★★ PRELUDES, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE Journeying into the mind of Rachmaninoff

Dave Malloy's innovative musical immerses us in a creative crisis

Where does music come from? That’s the vital question posed to Sergei Rachmaninoff in Dave Malloy’s extraordinary 2015 chamber work, as the great late-Romantic Russian composer – stuck in his third year of harrowing writer’s block – tries to relocate his gift. It comes from others and from himself; from past and present; from everything and nothing. It is ephemeral, and yet it is at the core of his very being.

Prom 63: Wang, Staatskapelle Dresden, Chung review – private passions

★★★★★ PROM 63: WANG, STAATSKAPELLE DRESDEN, CHUNG Private passions

An intimate journey through a showpiece concerto

Weirdly enough, it was “Tea for Two” that definitively proved her class for me. As a second encore to Rachmaninov’s Third Piano Concerto, after a mesmeric transcription of that composer’s Vocalise, Yuja Wang’s goodbye treat channelled the mighty Art Tatum with a scrupulous respect for the jazz master’s timing and phrasing.

theartsdesk at the Three Choirs Festival - the beautiful and the damned

★★★★★ THEARTSDESK AT THE THREE CHOIRS FESTIVAL The beautiful and the damned

Berlioz's thrilling theatre of the mind and Rachmaninov in rich Russian Orthodox mode

Our greatest Berlioz scholar, David Cairns, has called Le Damnation de Faust “an opera of the mind’s eye, not of the stage,” and I’ve certainly never seen a production that successfully staged its curious, episodic, actionless mixture of set piece, romantic brooding, and flickering cinematic imagery.

A Previn treasury

AN ANDRE PREVIN TREASURY Selected recordings of the great musician

Selected recordings of the great musician, who has died just short of his 90th birthday

In a way, he was a second Bernstein.

Rachvelishvili, ROH Orchestra, Pappano, Royal Opera House review - perfect night and day

★★★★★ RACHVELISHVILI, ROH ORCHESTRA, PAPPANO Perfect night and day

Georgian diva is the diamond in a Russian imperial crown

There's now something of a gala atmosphere when the Orchestra of the Royal Opera House takes to the Covent Garden stage with its music director Antonio Pappano. Admittedly some of the players are not the same as when he took up his tenure, but the core relationship of 17 years - with the contract now extended to at least the end of the 2022/23 season - results in collegial music-making at an intense level which most orchestras can only dream about.

Lupu, Philharmonia, Järvi, RFH review - concerto magical in parts, symphony stupendous

★★★★ LUPU, PHILHARMONIA, JÄRVI, RFH Concerto magical in parts, symphony stupendous

Delicacy from the legendary Romanian in Beethoven while Rachmaninov electrifies

Pianists most often cite Radu Lupu alongside Martha Argerich and Grigory Sokolov as the greatest. So it was hardly surprising to see so many top musicians in a packed audience, buzzing with expectation for the 73-year-old Romanian's most recent UK appearance with a conductor he respects, Paavo Järvi. Lupu appeared at Steven Isserlis's 60th birthday event at the Wigmore towards the end of last year, but before that hasn't been seen here since 2014.

Kempf, Devin, St Petersburg Philharmonic, Sinaisky, Symphony Hall, Birmingham review - aglow but not alight

★★★★ FREDDY KEMPF, ST PETERSBURG PHILHARMONIC, SYMPHONY HALL, BIRMINGHAM A blistering Rach 3 under the baton of Vassily Sinaisky

Rich romanticism and spirited solos in Rachmaninov and Mahler

In the fourth performance of their UK tour, with Vassily Sinaisky replacing an indisposed Yuri Temirkanov, the St Petersburg Philharmonic gave a warm and rousing performance at Symphony Hall, Birmingham.