Jewels, Royal Ballet

JEWELS: A trip to see Degas would do wonders for this triptych of balletic gems

A trip to see Degas would do wonders for this triptych of balletic gems

On six more occasions you can have an ideal experience of dance by visiting the Degas exhibition at the Royal Academy and then going to see Balanchine’s Jewels at the Opera House.

BBC Proms: Grimaud, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Honeck

Too much passion at the Proms proves hard to digest

In a week that sees Proms visits from two major American orchestras, it fell to Manfred Honeck and the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra to raise the curtain for their blue-blooded “Big Five” colleagues the Philadelphia Orchestra. With Tchaikovsky featuring large in both programmes comparisons are only natural, and it will be interesting to see what response Thursday night offers to an energetic but at times rather unsubtle evening of music from Pennsylvania’s “other” orchestra.

Classical CDs Weekly: Brahms, Desyatnikov, Glière, Tchaikovsky

Russian composer Leonid Desyatnikov: 'I have in mind only beauty and harmony of proportions'

Russian rarities and symphonies by two grumpy 19th-century giants

We head east this week - new pieces by a contemporary Russian composer, and a bargain box set showcasing the flamboyant orchestral music of a neglected Russian. And a famous viola player leads a young Moscow orchestra in electrifying accounts of Brahms and Tchaikovsky.

BBC Proms: Graham, Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester, Davis

Colin Davis and the Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester: the old leading the young

Viennese youth orchestra teams up with ageing conductor in the wild and exotic

The spectacle of an orchestra named after Mahler playing Stravinsky irresistibly calls to mind Stravinsky’s report of a performance of the Eighth Symphony in Zurich in 1913. “Imagine”, he wrote to Maurice Delage, “that for two hours you are made to understand that two times two makes four.” Oddly enough, repetition is the lifeblood of Stravinsky’s own music, though he rarely makes two times two equal four, and his symphonies don’t last two hours (nor, incidentally, do Mahler’s).

BBC Proms: Batiashvili, Philharmonia Orchestra, Salonen

Vivid Russian 20th-century playing with magical violinist at its heart

An all-Russian prom with two masterpieces centre stage and a remarkably compelling young violin artist brought in a packed house last night. Esa-Pekka Salonen and Lisa Batiashvili have already recorded Shostakovich’s First Violin Concerto, and the bond between them was evident in a delicate yet deeply searching performance of this melancholy, epic work with Salonen's orchestra, the Philharmonia.

BBC Proms: Swan Lake, Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra, Gergiev

Listening to a ballet without its pictures frees the original composition

The fact that the world’s most popular ballet score had never, until last night, been performed in full at the Proms says something about the lowly regard in which musical circles long held composition for ballet. The fact that the Albert Hall’s capacity audience bayed six times for Valery Gergiev’s return to take their appreciation of his and the Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra’s performance of it last night says something about it being about time that musical circles stopped being so snobby.

Swan Lake, Mariinsky Ballet, Royal Opera House

Uliana Lopatkina in the Mariinsky's 'Swan Lake'

A subdued start to the Mariinsky's 50th anniversary season

Act IV is the core of Swan Lake. It doesn’t seem so theatrically, being a peculiar 20-minute bolt-on after an interval that frequently lasts longer than the act that follows. But musically it transcends everything that has gone before, its thready little waltz one of the most delicately tragic things Tchaikovsky ever wrote. And balletically, Lev Ivanov’s rigidly structured classicism draws viewers into the terrifying void that is death. While emotionally the frozen swan-maiden of Act II and the brazen strumpet of Act III here merge to create the incarnation of suffering woman.

DVD: The Music Lovers

Ken Russell's mendacious Tchaikovsky 'biopic' is impossible to condemn

There are many ways to get to the truth. One of the best ways is to ignore the truth. That seems to be the mantra of Ken Russell's colourfully mendacious portrait of the composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, The Music Lovers, receiving its long-awaited DVD release.

English National Opera 2011-12 Season

Contemporary music and 11 new productions mark strong new season

Contemporary music and 11 new productions are at the heart of a strong ENO 2011-12 season announced today.