Beethoven Festival Weekend, Wigmore Hall review 1 - sparkle and charisma versus creative overkill

A peerless opening recital is followed by some curatorial oddities

While the Proms were ringing out the old season, the Wigmore Hall ushered in the big celebration of 2020: the 250th anniversary of Ludwig van Beethoven’s birth. The venue’s year-long festival (actually longer – the actual birthday is December ‘20) kicked off with a Beethoven weekend with more than just Beethoven in it.

Beethoven Festival Weekend, Wigmore Hall review 2 - total mastery in tone and depth

★★★★★ BEETHOVEN FESTIVAL WEEKEND, WIGMORE HALL Leonskaja crowns all

Perfect sonorities from ensembles, profundity from the peerless Elisabeth Leonskaja

Any festival would be proud and honoured to end with the great Elisabeth Leonskaja playing the last three Beethoven piano sonatas. Here the Everest was swiftly scaled as the tenth concert of a packed Wigmore Hall weekend.

Django Bates Belovèd Trio, Evan Parker, Wigmore Hall review – a one-off or a premiere?

The best was left until the end

"Genius" is a word to be used sparingly, but Django Bates surely is one. “A musical polymath and prodigiously gifted composer” went the citation for his Ivor Award a few weeks ago. “Joyful, insouciant and insanely clever,” wrote Evan Parker in a sleeve-note describing his re-workings of Charlie Parker in Confirmation (2011), the second album with his Belovèd Trio.

'A product not only of his era but also of his travels': Ian Page on Mozart's cosmopolitan education

'A PRODUCT NOT ONLY OF HIS ERA BUT ALSO OF HIS TRAVELS' Ian Page of The Mozartists on Mozart's cosmopolitan education

The Mozartists' main man on how an early life moving around Europe shaped a genius

When Mozart was an established composer living in Vienna during the final years of his short life, a young student seemingly came to him to seek his advice. The would-be young composer said that he was planning to write a symphony, and asked Mozart what advice he could give to him. Mozart replied that a symphony was a complex undertaking, and suggested that the youngster should first write a few keyboard sonatas and string quartets before undertaking an orchestral work. The student, however, was indignant.

Ax, Keenlyside, Dover Quartet, Wigmore Hall review – celebratory Schumann

★★★★ AX, KEENLYSIDE, DOVER QUARTET, WIGMORE HALL Celebratory Schumann

The great pianist marks his 70th with a congenial if unassuming programme

Emanuel Ax here celebrated his 70th birthday with an all-Schumann recital. In fact, it was an all-Schumann marathon, a three-hour concert at Wigmore Hall featuring solo works, Dichterliebe with Simon Keenlyside, and, with the Dover Quartet, the Piano Quartet and the Piano Quintet.

Igor Levit, Wigmore Hall review – full-spectrum Bach from a prodigious talent

★★★★★ IGOR LEVIT, WIGMORE HALL Full-spectrum Bach from a prodigious talent

The Russian-born Berliner delivers gripping pianistic theatre

You seldom hear a Champions League-level roar of approval at the Wigmore Hall. Last night, though, Igor Levit drew a throaty collective bark of appreciation from the audience after (for once) an awed hush had followed the final dying cadences of the aria’s return in Bach’s Goldberg Variations. Had he earned it? Absolutely. This recital was first of three devoted to the idea of Variations. Friday will see Levit play Beethoven’s Diabelli set, and Frederic Rzewski’s mighty deconstruction of the revolutionary anthem “The People United Will Never Be Defeated”.

Takács Quartet, Wigmore Hall review – strong voices in a glorious group

From Hungary to Norway, a great team shows world class

When critics praise a first-rank string quartet, convention demands they claim that the whole adds up to more than the sum of its parts. True enough, maybe, but with the Takács Quartet, each separate element really does blaze with a soloistic, virtuosic flame. From the first bars of last night’s opener at the Wigmore Hall, as Haydn plays pass-the-parcel with an apparently straightforward tune at the start of his G major quartet Op.76 no. 1, the sheer class and distinctive voice of each instrumental contribution grabbed the ear.

Hardenberger, Pöntinen, Wigmore Hall review - superstar trumpeter shows his class

A challenging programme was enjoyable - but less would have been more

There can be no questioning trumpeter Håkan Hardenberger’s extraordinary mastery: his big, unforced sound, mellifluous legato, athletic virtuosity and utterly controlled high notes. But his well-attested commitment to the avant-garde led the Wigmore audience to stay away in droves from his recital last night, leaving the hall insultingly empty for such a star performer.

JACK Quartet, Wigmore Hall review – superlative Elliott Carter quartets

★★★★ JACK QUARTET, WIGMORE HALL Superlative Elliott Carter from young Americans

Young American ensemble gives agile and luminous readings of complex scores

At Wigmore Hall the JACK Quartet presented the complete Elliott Carter string quartets in a single day – an astonishing feat given the scale and complexity of the music.