Interviews, Q&amp;As and feature articles<br />

First Person: harpsichordist Chad Kelly on reimagining Bach's Goldberg Variations

FIRST PERSON Harpsichordist Chad Kelly on reimagining Bach's Goldberg Variations

The background to what promises to be a vibrant new performance by Brecon Baroque

As musicians took tentative steps into the unfamiliar world of PPE, socially-distanced rehearsals and audiences watching from home on a computer screen, a common water-cooler question was, “What did you do during lockdown?”.  I am grateful to the Baroque violinist Rachel Podger that part of my lockdown involved rediscovering and reimagining a piece of music that I thought I knew well: the Goldberg Variations, the popular name we ascribe to Bach’s fourth Clavierübung (“Keyboard Practice”).

The Secret History of My Library: Essay by Daniel Saldaña París

BOOK EXTRACT The Secret History of My Library: Essay by Daniel Saldaña París

The eminent Mexican novelist on books and their ghosts

Books lost, left in houses I never returned to; dictionaries mislaid during a move; seven boxes sold to a second-hand bookstore… The history of my library is the history of loss and an impossible collection, scattered around several countries, reconstructed little by little but forever incomplete.

First Person: composer Brian Elias on the Music@Malling Festival's retrospective of his works

FIRST PERSON Composer Brian Elias on the Kent music festival hosting a retrospective of his works

Fifty years of vibrantly consistent music celebrated in rural Kent

It is my very good fortune to be offered by Music@Malling what is, in effect, a retrospective of my work. The music that will be performed was written between 1969 and 2019, exactly half a century. Inevitably, such a survey makes me think about the path I have followed, and although it is not for me to judge my own work, it does make me think about what it is that I have attempted to achieve, and what I need to turn to in the future.

First Person: tenor Nicky Spence on working with Blackheath locals on screen Stravinsky

NICKY SPENCE The tenor on working with Blackheath locals on screen Stravinsky

'The Rake's Progress' distilled and introduced by its star and community opera patron

As patron for a community organisation, I see clearly how opera is the biggest collaboration going. Between stage, orchestra  pit, school liaisons, chorus leaders, make-up bays and the magicians of the technical team, every cog is of equal importance. For the last 12 seasons, Blackheath Halls Community Opera has staged an opera each year, bringing together world class soloists and enthusiastic members of the local community who make up the orchestra and opera chorus.

Book extract: Snake by Erica Wright

BOOK EXTRACT: SNAKE BY ERICA WRIGHT Short essays on a slippery object of fear, fascination and misunderstanding

Short essays on a slippery object of fear, fascination and misunderstanding

Ophidiophobia is one of our most common fears, from the Greek for serpent ('Ophidia'). Writer and editor Erica Wright grew up in Tennessee with periodic interruptions from rattlesnakes, cottonmouths and copperheads, who were spotted slinking around and through the house her family moved to when she was five: "they were there first, had nature's version of squatters' rights." Instead of becoming accustomed to their silent presence, she developed a deep fear of these long-bodied, scaly creatures.

First Person: Gregory Batsleer on choirs for the 21st century

FIRST PERSON: CONDUCTOR GREGORY BATSLEER on choirs for the 21st century

The conductor considers the future for choral music

Choral music is one of the UK’s oldest and most-loved art forms. It has been at the centre of my life ever since I started singing in primary school and has grown to become a crucial part of my identity as both a musician and artist. I am a signed-up evangelist of choral music; I do not need convincing of its power. I strongly believe, however, that we have reached an important moment in our history in which we need to look seriously at who we are, what our future looks like and crucially dare to be bold about what we can become.

First Person: pianist Danny Driver on teaching online and the importance of music education

FIRST PERSON: PIANIST DANNY DRIVER Teaching online and the importance of music education

The challenges of top-level music lessons during the pandemic

There’s an old saying that goes: if life deals you lemons, make lemonade. To say that the COVID-19 pandemic is a lemon would be a huge and trivial understatement – it has had a massive effect on people’s way of life across the globe, it has cost hundreds of thousands of lives and permanently scarred many more physically, psychologically and emotionally.

Eavesdropping on Rattle, the LSO and Bartók’s Bluebeard

EAVESDROPPING ON RATTLE, THE LSO AND BARTÓK'S BLUEBEARD A privileged preview

Ahead of the London Symphony Orchestra’s streaming next month, a privileged preview

One source of advance information told us to expect a reduced version of Bartók’s one-act Bluebeard’s Castle, among the 20th century’s most original and profound operatic masterpieces.

First Person: Artistic Director John Gilhooly on an inclusive and diverse Wigmore Hall

The London venue which kept artists afloat during lockdown reopens tomorrow

It is hard to believe that it’s really happening! Despite a few bumps along the way, Christian Gerhaher and Gerold Huber, one of the greatest Lieder duos of our time, will open the 20/21 Wigmore Hall Season tomorrow night in a programme of Schubert and Berg. This is the first of 100 concerts between now and Christmas.

Singer-songwriter Mary Chapin Carpenter: 'I wanted to do something. I wanted to be useful in some way'

'I WANTED TO DO SOMETHING. I WANTED TO BE USEFUL IN SOME WAY' Singer-songwriter Mary Chapin Carpenter on creating in a time of crisis

On creating her 'Songs from Home' in a time of crisis, depression and musical empathy

Music has never been more important than in these dark, dislocating and death-stalked days, fear and grief visiting us in ways once unimaginable. The lack of live music – the lack even of the possibility of live music in the near future – is an absence keenly felt. However much we love to listen in the isolation of our own headphones, nothing can ever replace the communal concert event.