Blu-ray: The Music Lovers

★★★★ BLU-RAY: THE MUSIC LOVERS Ken Russell's audacious, OTT Tchaikovsky biopic

Audacious, OTT Tchaikovsky biopic from music-loving director Ken Russell

Discussing 1971’s The Music Lovers with writer John Baxter, director Ken Russell suggested, among other things, that “music and facts don’t mix”. They don’t always line up here, but this film does stand up as a worthy successor to the BBC’s Delius: Song of Summer and Dance of the Seven Veils, the latter deemed so offensive by the Strauss estate that it remained unseen for 50 years.

Prom 17, Kozhukhin, RPO, Petrenko review - four tripartite masterpieces

★★★★★ PROM 17, KOZHUKHIN, RPO, PETRENKO An orchestra adaptable to different styles pulls off a perfect programme

An orchestra adaptable to different styles pulls off a perfect programme

Under its master music director, the once-torpid Royal Philharmonic Orchestra has given us some of the most brilliant concerts of the 2023-4 season. Their Prom together changed course from the Elgar/Rachmaninov theme and dared even more, placing together four works in three parts each – two with atmospheric outer sections flanking vivid ceremonials (Ives, Debussy), two placing the lyricism at the dead centre (Ravel, Tchaikovsky).

Swan Lake, Royal Ballet review - grand, eloquent, superb

★★★★★ SWAN LAKE, ROYAL BALLET Liam Scarlett's fine refashioning looks better than ever

Liam Scarlett's fine refashioning returns for a third season, and looks better than ever

In uncertain times like these, the single thing that every flagship ballet company needs is a convincing iteration of a 19th-century blockbuster. New works are all very well and necessary, but they don’t have the pulling power of Swan Lake, or the staying power. The Royal Ballet’s previous production served the company well for three decades, more than justifying the original investment.

Tchaikovsky's Wife review - husband material

★★ TCHAIKOVSKY'S WIFE Discord drowns out gay composer's marriage in Serebrennikov's biopic

Discord drowns out gay composer's marriage in Kirill Serebrennikov's biopic

The movies haven’t been kind to Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. The Nutcracker Suite was a highlight of Walt Disney’s Fantasia (1940) perhaps, but the 1969 Soviet biopic directed by Igor Talankin was tedious and Ken Russell’s The Music Lovers, released two years later, worse than that.

Nutcracker, Tuff Nutt Jazz Club, Royal Festival Hall review - a fresh, compelling, adult take on a festive favourite

★★★★ NUTCRACKER, TUFF NUTT JAZZ CLUB A fresh, compelling, adult take on festive favourite

Drew McOnie offers a fresh coming-of-age twist in a compact new jazz version

Intimacy isn’t everything, but there’s nothing like seeing dance live and up close. A good seat in a large theatre will give you the whole stage picture but lose the detail. Lost too will be that quasi-visceral connection with the movement.

Classical CDs: Polkas, fans and chestnut trees

CLASSICAL CDS Czech piano music, Cuban mambo, a pair of Renaissance choral blockbusters

Czech piano music, Cuban mambo and a pair of Renaissance choral blockbusters

 

Kabelac pianoKabeláč: Eight Preludes, Motifs from Exotic Lands, Smetana: Dreams Jan Bartoš (piano) (Supraphon)

Connolly, BBC Philharmonic, Storgårds, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review - beginning with a fanfare

★★★★ CONNOLLY, BBC PHILHARMONIC, STORGARDS, BRIDGEWATER HALL Beginning with a fanfare

Things both rich and rare in the season opener

The opening concert of a new season often tends to be a statement of intent, and this was John Storgårds’ opener of the first full season since he was appointed chief conductor of the BBC Philharmonic. He’s hardly a newcomer to them, though, since he has been principal guest conductor (latterly chief guest) for nearly 12 years now. The mutual respect and trust are clear.

This programme, however, began with a fanfare and continued with something rich and something rare (not in that order).

Classical CDs: Penitence, pipe smoking and soot sprites

CLASSICAL CDS A conducting giant, Renaissance choral music and Japanese film scores

A conducting giant commemorated, plus Renaissance choral music and Japanese film scores

 

Klemperer BIGOtto Klemperer: The Warner Classics Remastered Edition (Warner Classics)

Goosby, RSNO, Bringuier, Usher Hall, Edinburgh review - lyrical colour and dynamic brilliance

A dazzling young violinist and a first-rate stand-in conductor offer terrific Tchaikovsky

When a publication as venerable as Gramophone features an artist on its front cover, it’s a surefire sign that they’ve hit the big time. This month that honour fell to young American violinist Randall Goosby and, coincidentally, he was the soloist for this week’s concerts with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. I hadn’t come across him before this double encounter but, if his Usher Hall performance is anything to go by, then the hype around him is justified.