Empirical’s Pop-Up Jazz Lounge, Old Street Underground

EMPIRICAL’S POP-UP JAZZ LOUNGE, OLD STREET UNDERGROUND The experimental quartet’s plan to bring jazz to the people comes off

The experimental quartet’s plan to bring jazz to the people comes off

“I can’t believe it. Free jazz in Old Street tube, how cool is that?” It’s a relief to hear this kind of thing from passersby, because Empirical’s attempt to bring jazz to the people, to reach new audiences and develop their music through an experimental, week-long residency in a London tube station, could so easily have gone wrong.

'We have a duty to all children to share our rich artistic history'

'WE HAVE A DUTY TO ALL CHILDREN TO SHARE OUR RICH ARTISTIC HISTORY' Mezzo Sarah Connolly's passionate advocacy of the arts at an ACE event in Westminster

Transcript of mezzo Sarah Connolly's passionate advocacy of the arts at an ACE event in Westminster

Two hundred and 74 years ago today, on 14 September 1741, Georg Friedrich Handel completed the first edition of his legendary oratorio, Messiah. It is a work associated with children’s charity, and thanks to a royal charter granted to philanthropist Thomas Coram’s Foundling Hospital in Bloomsbury, Handel raised awareness and money for the orphans with performances every year for decades. William Hogarth was a governor and he persuaded leading artists Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Gainsborough to donate works, effectively creating at the hospital the first public art gallery.

Opinion: Bazalgette is welcome at the Arts Council

OPINION: BAZALGETTE IS WELCOME AT THE ARTS COUNCIL The man who debased British TV now holds the public arts purse - a crazy choice? Not necessarily

The man who debased British TV now holds the public arts purse - a crazy choice? Not necessarily

So the chairman of Big Brother TV becomes chairman of the Arts Council. Is it good or bad that Sir Peter Bazalgette will now hold the purse-strings for our publicly supported arts, the most debated, the most fragile, the most ephemeral elements of our national cultural consciousness, the most opposite of the time-wasting that is reality TV?

Our Country's Good: Director Max Stafford-Clark opens up

OUR COUNTRY'S GOOD Why is Out of Joint's Max Stafford-Clark allowing the public into rehearsals for his revival of a modern classic?

Why is the creator of Out of Joint allowing the public into rehearsals for his revival of a modern classic?

Our Country’s Good, a play that proclaimed the power and enduring worth of theatre and that celebrated its centrality to our lives, was of importance in the third term of a government which deemed 'subsidy' a dirty word.” So wrote Max Stafford-Clark of the play he directed at the Royal Court in 1988. A titan of the British Theatre for over four decades and artistic director of the Royal Court for 14 of them (1979-93), ask Stafford-Clark if he feels the words are as relevant now as then and his answer is unequivocal.  

Q&A Special: Arts Patron Donatella Flick

Princess Missikoff explains why Cameron is 'mad' and 'unintelligent' in hitting arts patronage

Donatella Flick, one of Britain's most important arts patrons, is furious. "Madness!" she cries in her lush Italian voice. "This is a country that was fantastic, and now there's a demolition going on, bit by bit!" We're sitting in Sir Winston Churchill's old drawing room - now her drawing room - near Kensington Gardens, and I would give a lot to see David Cameron flinching on her huge black sofa as he got a withering dressing-down.

Cash for arts: should it be bums-per-pound or pounds-per-bum?

CASH FOR ARTS: New music support body on defensive as Britain's composers attack en masse

New music support body on defensive as Britain's composers attack en masse

The organisation that channels public money to generate today's new classical music has been resoundingly condemned this week by all of Britain's most important composers. In an open letter, signed by Sir Harrison Birtwistle, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, Colin Matthews, Nicola LeFanu, Julian Anderson and 250 more, the British contemporary music-making establishment accuses Sound and Music - set up by the Arts Council three years ago - of having alienated virtually all the composers it was set up to work with.

Summary of main Arts Council winners and losers

The Barbican flourishes but the Almeida theatre loses out

A sliderule of 11-15 per cent reductions in annual grants by 2015, compared with this year, has been applied to Britain's major orchestras, opera, dance, theatre and music organisations. One major gainer is London's Barbican Centre - one major loser is the now world-famous Almeida Theatre, which loses almost 40 per cent of its current annual subsidy despite its reputation for innovation and discovery. However, the Arcola Theatre, another small innovative theatre, gets a big boost. Companies to lose all their grant from next year include Hammersmith's Riverside Studios and Derby Theatre.

Dance landscape shrinks and shifts nationwide in Arts Council cuts

Buck passes to regions as choreographic pool reduced

The Arts Council’s rearrangement of the dance world by its handling of its 15 per cent subsidy cut shows no change in its persistence in choosing to prefer bureaucratic structures to talent. The 15 per cent cut has been handed straight over to all the ballet companies, with no evidence of strategic thinking about the implications for numbers of dancers, productions or programming. But it’s in the area of contemporary dance that my first impression is of an urge at HQ to pass the buck of decisions to the regions to handle.

Come clean over cuts, arts chiefs challenge Cameron

Culture heads write en masse to PM on fears for longterm arts support

The leaders of Britain’s leading arts establishments, from the Royal Opera House, Royal Shakespeare Company and Philharmonia Orchestra to  choreographers Akram Khan and Siobhan Davies, have written to the Prime Minister asking him to come clean about his longterm plan for arts subsidies. The letter was released at a crisis meeting this morning at the Young Vic, attended by some 500 arts figures.