Osborne, Hallé, Elder, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review - an eclectic mix

★★★★ OSBOURNE, HALLE, ELDER, BRIDGEWATER HALL, MANCHESTER An eclectic mix

Glory in conclusion of Manchester's Vaughan Williams symphonies cycle

The Mancunian tribute to Ralph Vaughan Williams – a symphonic cycle shared by the BBC Philharmonic and Hallé – reached its conclusion with the Eighth Symphony last night. But, unlike most concerts in the RVW150 sequence, in this one (the final performance in the Hallé Thursday concerts series of 2021-22), Sir Mark Elder added an eclectic mix of other composers’ work to the evening.

Milk and Gall, Theatre 503 review - motherhood in the age of Trump

★★ MILK AND GALL, THEATRE 501 Baby turns New Yorkers' lives upside down

No-holds-barred comedy lays bare the unsentimental side of parenting

Tuesday, 8 November 2016. Vera is in a New York hospital room giving birth to a son. On anxiously checked phones, the votes are piling up for Hillary, but the states are piling up for Trump. Vera’s world will never be the same again.

Hillary, Sky Documentaries review - facing the fire and fury

★★★★ HILLARY, SKY DOCUMENTARIES Facing the fire and fury

A successful and heavily scrutinised life. Were all the questions answered?

“Never get rattled”. For some, it might sound like a trite self-help mantra. For Hillary Rodham Clinton, it was an essential daily memo and a practical self-affirmation. In recent public memory, she is the political figure who has been rattled the most, often with sinister intent.

Albums of the Year: Leonard Cohen - You Want It Darker

ALBUMS OF THE YEAR: LEONARD COHEN – YOU WANT IT DARKER Music at death's door from a late master - and other intimations of mortality

Music at death's door from a late master - and other intimations of mortality

Popular music works best when it strikes a chord that goes beyond the beauty of the hook, the seductive quality of the melody, or the catchiness of the lyrics. The resonance can be personal or universal, or perhaps, in order to qualify as a critic’s choice as album of the year, it should be both. Leonard Cohen’s last album, made in the full knowledge that it would be his last, spoke to me with a directness and depth that induced a paradoxical mixture of pleasure and pain.

Cohen was, it would seem, born wise, and a certain native maturity coloured his work from the start. As he revisited over the years the themes of abandonment, loss and grief, there was no real sense of progress, only a gentle hammering away at the wounds that we all share and of which he spoke with such eloquence. The darkness of his concerns was redeemed by a biting sense of the absurd and knowledge that the human comedy will never cease to produce both laughter and horror.

Long gone the Scandinavian muse to whom he sang so many decades ago

Cohen was always an apostle of slowness: his last three albums gradually moved towards a sloth’s stately slow-motion, a last-ditch Zen monk’s cry against the frantic acceleration that drives the 21st century world. You Want It Darker speaks of the shadow of our hyped-up civilisation, riffing on the despair that drives us in a manic cycle of peaks and troughs, a dionysiac dance on the edge of the abyss. This is a timely album in every sense, as if death’s presence at Cohen’s side had whispered guidance to him as he wrote and performed the songs. Long gone the Scandinavian muse to whom he sang so many decades ago, although the beauty he found through her backaways still gives his songs a brilliance that shines through their melancholy cloud-cover.

Mortality is in the air – a sign of decadence, perhaps: the end of an era for which the myth of infinite progress provided a blinding and misleading leitmotiv. David Bowie’s Blackstar and Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds’ Skeleton Tree are both haunted by the grim reaper: with Bowie, the knowledge that his days were over, and for Nick Cave, the tragic and premature accidental death of his 15 year-old son. As with Cohen, proximity to tragedy, finiteness and loss produced work of great beauty, and these are albums that provide fitting companions for Cohen’s last goodbye. These works all speak eloquently yet mysteriously of the spirit, of things about which it is usually better to remain silent, and that can only be obliquely evoked through the combination of music and poetry.

Beyond the realm of 2016’s albums, tracks and gigs, I won’t easily forget moments of surprising and totally magical intimacy with Björk, at the breathtaking virtual reality exhibition at Somerset House, Björk Digital. And the track which has perhaps given me the most sustained pleasure over the year – “Bururú Burará, Como Esta Miguel” by the fabulous Sexteto Habañero, masters of early son. That was recorded in the 1920s but sounds as fresh as anything made today.

Two more essential albums from 2016 

Bon Iver - 22, A Million

Sidestepper - Supernatural Love

Gig of the Year

Sidestepper at WOMAD, Charlton Park

Track of the year

Bon Iver - "20 ♯Strafford APTS"

 @Rivers47

 

Overleaf: listen to "20 ♯Strafford APTS" by Bon Iver

Albums of the Year: Radiohead - A Moon Shaped Pool

Thom Yorke captured the fearful sound of alienation in 2016

Context in rock is everything. Popular music is, after all, essentially a reaction to a moment in time. So, whilst in another year, an album like A Moon Shaped Pool may just have lurked in my top five, political circumstances propelled it straight to number one. It wasn't just that the piece was thick with feverishness and alienation. What really made it embody 2016 was the unmistakable whiff of fear. 

Albums of the Year: Paul Simon – Stranger to Stranger

ALBUMS OF THE YEAR: PAUL SIMON - STRANGER TO STRANGER Still making new musical discoveries after 50 years in the business

Still making new musical discoveries after 50 years in the business

Paul Simon has always been as eclectic as anyone in popular music, tapping into latin music, gospel and reggae long before they dreamed up the term "World Music". Simon is now 74, but he's as restless and inquisitive as ever. For Stranger to Stranger, his thirteenth solo album, he picked up his metaphorical pith helmet and machete and trekked deeper into the hinterland of his private musical vision.