Pick of the 2018 BBC Proms: women composers first and last, blockbuster Bernstein

PICK OF THE 2018 BBC PROMS Women composers first and last, blockbuster Bernstein

Our classical and opera writers choose their favourites in prospect

Let's be honest, this is the least interesting Proms season on paper for years, at least in terms of adventurous repertoire choices, following on the heels of the best in 2017. Yet in statistical terms it's more comprehensive and multi-media-friendly than ever, starting tonight with a free "Curtain Raiser" performance before the official First Night tomorrow - see David Kettle's choice below – and ending some 75 main Proms and 11 smaller-scale beauties later on 8 September.

Ismaili a Go-Go: How the Aga Khan funded a music renaissance

Musical extravaganza focusing on enigmatic Central Asia comes to the Royal Albert Hall

Many of us recognise that rather striking modernist building in Cromwell Gardens near South Kensington tube, having seen it on the way to the V&A or perhaps a Prom at the Albert Hall but not been sure what it is exactly. I hadn't actually been inside until last week when I was given a guided tour. The space was discussed at one point as a potential site for the National Theatre.

Joan Baez, Royal Albert Hall review - diamonds, but no rust

★★★★★ JOAN BAEZ, ROYAL ALBERT HALL Diamonds, but no rust

With grace and dignity, American folk legend heads into retirement

2018 has become a year of farewells as a mighty handful of musicians who have, in their different ways, defined popular music bow out. Among them is Joan Baez, a star on the Harvard Square coffeehouse scene when she made her unannounced debut at the 1959 Newport Folk Festival. She was 18 and, it’s safe to say, never dreamed she’d be filling concert halls around the world 60 years later.

Gregory Porter, Royal Albert Hall review - impressive first night for the Nat King Cole & Me tour

★★★★ GREGORY PORTER, ROYAL ALBERT HALL Impressive first night

Much more to this show than simple re-creation

It was 2011 when Gregory Porter made his first London appearances at Pizza Express in Dean Street. That club has a capacity just over 100, and yet it only seems like yesterday.

Cirque du Soleil - OVO, Royal Albert Hall review - fantastical creatures, heart-in-mouth thrills

★★★★ CIRQUE DU SOLEIL - OVO, ROYAL ALBERT HALL Fantastical creatures, heart-in-mouth thrills

Athleticism, daring feats, grace and visual poetry in Cirque's animal world exravaganza

For their eighth debut at the Royal Albert Hall, mesmerising French-Canadian performance art company Cirque du Soleil takes the audience on a journey into the world underfoot.

Best of 2017: Classical concerts

BEST OF 2017 CLASSICAL CONCERTS UK orchestras on top form, while there's a bright future for enterprise elsewhere

UK orchestras on top form, while there's a bright future for enterprise elsewhere

Did Simon Rattle's return to the UK as Principal Conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra live up to the hype? Mostly, and when it did, the music-making was superbly alive. But it's vital to observe that another orchestra and chief conductor have been carrying on equally important and sometimes groundbreaking work in the same hall.

Robert Plant, Royal Albert Hall review - the voice remains the same

★★★★ ROBERT PLANT, ROYAL ALBERT HALL No need for a Zeppelin reunion

Led Zeppelin frontman and his Sensational Space Shifters are joyously joined by Chrissie Hynde

“Back in the Sixties, before I was born…” Robert Plant has always been as amusing a raconteur as he is a deft weaver of different musical styles, and last night’s show at the Royal Albert Hall was no exception.

Jools Holland and José Feliciano, Royal Albert Hall review - giving the audience what they expect

JOOLS HOLLAND AND JOSÉ FELICIANO, ROYAL ALBERT HALL The live show stays close to the spirit of a 25-year TV phenomenon   

The live show stays close to the spirit of a 25-year TV phenomenon

It really is quite something to be admired, the sheer longevity and staying power of the Jools Holland franchise. The TV show Later...With Jools Holland, with the same core team running it, has just celebrated its 25th anniversary and put its 51st season to bed. That takes us all the way back to October 1992, just after the summer of John Bryan and Antonia de Sancha, of toes and Chelsea strips. Meanwhile, another part of the franchise, Jools' Annual Hootenanny, with a similar format has been running since New Year’s Eve 1993. Holland and his team have been building all this since his mid-thirties. He will turn 60 in January.

Two Royal Albert Hall shows, with the huge venue completely packed, of which I saw the first, marked roughly the half-way point of a 35-date British Isles tour, which will end just before Christmas. It is an album launch tour for As You See Me Now, Jools Holland’s album with his Rhythm and Blues Band and José Feliciano.

By the end the entire audience was completely energised

The TV shows have shaped a set of audience expectations over time, and the live show duly gets on with the task of fulfilling them as closely as possible. As Gary Burton once wrote, remembering what he had learnt as part of George Shearing’s band, “no matter what the artist thinks, most people really just want to hear what they already know.”

So the trademarks are all there: Jools Holland and a succession of guests, the double-breasted pinstripe suit, the familiar patter. There are opportunities to feature members of the band and to give solo spots to fine singers Beth Rowley and Louise Marshall.

Musically there is much to admire. The focus, the talk is all about boogie and boogieland, but I like the way the door is open to other styles; the full band in ska mode is an envigorating delight. I also found my ears constantly listening out for the wonderfully subtle interventions from Chris Holland on Hammond.

Mo ZowayedJosé Feliciano is 72, his voice is strong, but his progress on to and off the stage did seem difficult and ungainly. On the album he is at his best in Stevie Wonder’s "Treat Myself" from the 1995 album Conversation Piece, but that didn’t make it into the live show. His mini-set started and ended with his familiar covers, “California Dreamin’” and “Light My Fire”. There is also a new song "New Year", performed against a visual backdrop of Big Ben and fireworks. Thus are franchises subliminally and subtly reinforced.

Feliciano also sang “Let’s Find Each Other Tonight”. Like everything else, the Albert Hall crowd was gleefully lapping it up, while I was in my own world, quietly troubled by the versification of the couplet “If you need some Company/Come and take a chance on me”, in which the word company is set as an anapest rather than a dactyl. It is the tiniest thing, but the more I hear it, sorry, the more it grates.

Earlier, the support set had come from Mo Zowayed (pictured above), a young Bahraini folk-rock singer-songwriter who has lived for four years in British Columbia. He ploughs a similar furrow to Ray LaMontagne and the Pariah Dogs but his songs don’t – yet – stay in the mind in quite the same way.

The show built to a final blazing, burning soul set featuring Ruby Turner and the band in full cry on songs like "Let the Good Times Roll" and an original "Roll out of this Hole". By that time the entire audience was completely energised and on its feet. 

@SebScotney

Overleaf: watch Jools Holland and José Feliciano in "Let’s Find Each Other Tonight"

Last Night of the Proms review: Stemme, BBCSO, Oramo - international array, abundant blue and gold

★★★★ LAST NIGHT OF THE PROMS: STEMME, BBCSO, ORAMO Final celebrations for a fine season efficient, varied, and fun as ever

Final celebrations for a fine season efficient, varied, and fun as ever

The Last Night of the Proms is always a beautifully choreographed event, and this year’s was no exception. The format changes little, but each year a new selection of works is chosen to fill the slots. The BBC Symphony Orchestra, always the backbone of the season, somehow manages to sound fresh for their final outing.

Prom 74: Ax, Vienna Philharmonic, Tilson Thomas review - elegance without passion

Orchestra shines but Tilson Thomas plays it safe

The Vienna Philharmonic makes a beautiful sound, no question about that: the question is what to do with it. Michael Tilson Thomas has some ideas, but they are mostly low-key. He is currently touring with the orchestra, and seems to have been chosen as a safe pair of hands, offering elegant and lyrical interpretations, but without any extravagance.