First Person: playwright Chinonyerem Odimba on birthing her potent and timely new show

CHINONYEREM ODIMBA The playwright on birthing her potent and timely new 'Black Love'

The musical 'Black Love' places the reality of racism centre-stage at the Kiln

People often ask how long a play takes to make its way out of you. And it’s always a valid question because no matter how beautiful, soft, joyful, or short a play is, there is a wrestling match that takes place between the idea lodging itself somewhere in you, and it turning into words that actors can have fun getting to know. With Black Love, opening this week at the Kiln Theatre, that journey from the story embedding itself to a rehearsal script took almost seven years.

First Person: composer Mason Bates on the powers and perils of musical storytelling

FIRST PERSON Composer Mason Bates on the powers and perils of musical storytelling

From Beethoven to Pink Floyd and 'Liquid Interface', premiered in the UK on Wednesday

What do Beethoven and Pink Floyd have in common?

Narrative – ingeniously animated by music.

From the Ninth Symphony to The Wall, narrative music has brought a new dimension to the forms and genres it has touched.

First Person: Tim Walker on crossing over from critic to playwright

FIRST PERSON Tim Walker on crossing over from critic to playwright

A longtime critic shifts gears to bring Gina Miller and Theresa May to the stage

The divide between theatre critics and the theatrical profession has always been a chasm, but occasionally a wire has been thrown between the two and plucky or foolhardy individuals have attempted to traverse it. A three-times-unsuccessful applicant to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in my teens, I managed to turn actor in middle age in Top Hat and Spamalot in the West End. These were, however, merely stunts dreamt up by producers to promote their shows and my performances were unstartlingly overlooked in the Olivier Awards.   

First Person: young composer Nicola Perikhanyan on a new immersive reality experience at London Wall

NICOLA PERIKHANYAN Young composer on an immersive reality experience at London Wall

Multilayered work for clarinet is part of 'HARMONY' in the City

There's something really moving about standing in the centre of London Wall's Roman ruins and looking up at the city that has grown around it. Thinking about our past, present and future simultaneously. More than 2000 years have passed since the Romans created our city, and while much has changed there's still so much consistency in how our society exists, both the beauty and the flaws. As a civilisation, how far have things really shifted?

First Person: composer Conor Mitchell on challenging religious orthodoxy from a queer perspective in MASS

FIRST PERSON Conor Mitchell on challenging religious orthodoxy from a queer perspective in MASS

Finding the authentic gay 'me' in a new work premiered with the Ulster Orchestra tonight

A mass, in its simplest form, is the order of prayers that are said in a religious service. It is standardised and has been for centuries, in order to create a theatrical journey that takes us through a service. Composers have always been drawn to the mass as a structure because it has an inherent drama. It draws on themes of rebirth, change, redemption.

Judith van Driel of the Dudok Quartet Amsterdam: 'the more we played Brahms, the more freedom we found'

FIRST PERSON Judth van Driel of the Dudok Quartet Amsterdam on Brahms

On approaching the elusive and unreachable in four chamber masterpieces

In every life there are moments of great significance. Experiences that stick with us and define our own personal story.

First Persons: Susan Bullock, Gerald Finley and Stephen Higgins on a 'Bluebeard's Castle' with a difference

SUSAN BULLOCK, GERALD FINLEY & STEPHEN HIGGINS 'Bluebeard's Castle' with a difference

How experience of dementia led to a unique take on Bartók's dark masterpiece

Tonight a version of Bartók's Bluebeard's Castle launches in the intimate surroundings of Stone Nest, a former Welsh chapel in London's West End. Its conductor along with soprano Susan Bullock and baritone Gerald FInley, alternating in the roles of Judith and Bluebeard with Gweneth Ann Rand and Michael Mayes, discuss its special claim on our attention.

 

Stephen Higgins, conductor and co-founder of Theatre of Sound

First Person: ethnomusicologist Shumaila Hemani on global musical traditions and Concert for Afghanistan

No boundaries between east and west, north and south, in tonight's live music-making

In early 2020, the year that soon saw  COVID-19 lockdown, I served on the music faculty for Semester at Sea, Spring 2020 voyage, where I taught self-designed courses on global music cultures as well as a course called Soundscapes.