Stile Antico, Wigmore Hall review - a glorious birthday celebration

★★★★★ STILE ANTICO, WIGMORE HALL A glorious birthday celebration

Early music group passes a milestone still at the top of its game

There was a wonderful festal spirit at the Wigmore Hall last night, as the vocal ensemble Stile Antico ran through a Greatest Hits selection in celebration of their 20th anniversary, in front of a packed and enthusiastic audience. The 12-strong group still boasts four founder members, but this was swelled to 10 for the final item, as a swarm of alumni joined in a beautiful rendition of Gibbons’ The Silver Swan.

MacMillan St John Passion, Boylan, National Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, Hill, NCH Dublin review - flares around a fine Christ

★★★★ MACMILLAN ST JOHN PASSION, BOYLAN, NSO, NCH DUBLIN Flares around a fine Christ

Young Irish baritone pulls focus in blazing performance of a 21st century classic

Never make your mind up too soon about any large-scale work by a genius. Back in 2010, I had my doubts about James MacMillan’s first Passion, hearing in the impact of Colin Davis’s Barbican performance a halfway house between the composer's shattering best and his more contrived side.

First Person: St John's College choral conductor Christopher Gray on recording 'Lament & Liberation'

A showcase for contemporary choral works appropriate to this time

When I arrived at St John’s College, Cambridge, in April 2023, it was a daunting prospect to be taking over the reins of a choir with such a distinguished recording heritage: there have been more than 100 albums since the 1950s on some of the UK’s top labels. 

London Choral Sinfonia, Waldron, Smith Square Hall review - contemporary choral classics alongside an ambitious premiere

★★★★ LONDON CHORAL SINFONIA, WALDRON, SMITH SQUARE HALL An impassioned response to the climate crisis was slightly hamstrung by its text

An impassioned response to the climate crisis was slightly hamstrung by its text

The London Choral Sinfonia are a very impressive group, a professional choir who are churning out terrific recordings at a breakneck pace – I reviewed their latest release of Malcolm Arnold on theartsdesk only last week – as well as a busy schedule of live concerts and educational outreach.

At Smith Square Hall last night there was another aspect of their work on view, a commitment to new music in the form of a premiere of a large-scale new piece and, if I had my reservations about it, that commitment and ambition is still very much to be applauded.

MacMillan's Ordo Virtutum, BBC Singers, Jeannin, Milton Court review - dramatic journey of a medieval soul

★★★★ MACMILLAN'S 'ORDO VIRTUTUM', BBC SINGERS, JEANNIN, MILTON COURT Choral music's finest advocate runs the gamut in an epic battle of heaven and hell

Choral music's finest advocate runs the gamut in an epic battle of heaven and hell

Does any living composer write better for choirs, or more demandingly when circumstances allow, than James MacMillan? Admirable as it is to have extant words and music for a music-drama, morality play, call it what you will, by medieval pioneer Hildegard of Bingen, her imagining of a soul torn between virtues and Satan is inevitably one-dimensional. MacMillan finds variety and surprises in response to her text at ever turn of this 80-minute epic.

BBC Singers, Aurora Orchestra, Collon, Kings Place review - on the way to heaven via King's Cross

★★★★ BBC SINGERS, AURORA, COLLON, KING'S PLACE Musical journey towards bliss

Intimate settings for a musical journey towards bliss

Just now, music about survival, transcendence and the afterlife may have a special resonance for the BBC Singers. After all, the supremely versatile century-old chamber choir has endured its own near-death experience – at the hands of the BBC top brass who, in 2023, planned to axe them.

Messiah, Wild Arts, Chichester Cathedral review - a dynamic battle between revelatory light and Stygian gloom

MESSIAH, CHICHESTER CATHEDRAL Wild Arts' inventive interpretation delivers the story

This supple inventive interpretation of the 'Messiah' thrillingly delivers the story

The Wild Arts Ensemble was founded by Orlando Jopling in 2022 to create a dynamic, pared-back style of performance in which, as he put it, the “costumes, set and props… can be packed up into a couple of suitcases that we can take with us on the train”.

Part of the aim, as with an increasing number of ensembles these days, is to tour in a way that’s more environmentally sustainable, but it’s also resulted in fresh and vivid re-readings of classics that are igniting enthusiasm around the country.

Bach Mendelssohn Festival, Part I, Oxford Philharmonic Orchestra review - the flame that never died

Top-flight performers show how a musical legacy endured

“I am not better than my fathers.” Cracked, pained, occasionally rasping, rising to a fearsome roar then subsiding to a throaty whisper, Sir Bryn Terfel’s still-formidable bass-baritone made the great vault of Wren’s Sheldonian Theatre in Oxford shrink to a shoebox.

Wyn, Dwyer, McAteer, RSNO & Choirs, Diakun, Usher Hall, Edinburgh review - ebullient but bitty

‘Carmina Burana’ is fun in parts, but Langer’s ‘Dong’ doesn’t flow

Carmina Burana isn’t a masterpiece: it’s primarily a bit of fun; fun to listen to, fun to play, really fun to sing.

Few and far between are the performances where it ever manages to be much more than that, though this RSNO concert came close, mainly thanks to the conducting of Marzena Diakun, making her debut with the orchestra. The faster, louder sections were kept on an admirably tight leash so that the opening two "Fortuna" choruses really crackled, and the rumbustious choruses in the tavern were a hoot, the percussion giving it what can only be described as “welly.”

BBC Singers, BBCSO, Jeannin, Barbican review - from stormy weather to blue skies

BBC SINGERS, JEANNIN, BARBICAN Uplifting centenary party for the great choral survivors

An uplifting centenary party for the great choral survivors

“Bold, ambitious, and good for the sector.” So said Charlotte Moore, the BBC chief content officer, who currently earns £468,000, in March last year as she defended plans to close the BBC Singers as part of a package of swingeing musical cuts masked – as usual – as a high-principled strategic rethink.