Levit, Berlin Philharmoniker, Paavo Järvi, Digital Concert Hall review - optimal light and dark

★★★★★ LEVIT, BERLIN PHILHARMONIKER, PAAVO JÄRVI Optimal light and dark

Different energies in buoyant Beethoven and disturbing Prokofiev

It seems right that (arguably) the greatest orchestra in the world has (unarguably) the best livestreaming and archive service.

Pushkin House Music Festival online review - Russian around Bloomsbury

★★★ PUSHKIN HOUSE MUSIC FESTIVAL A Russian season in Bloomsbury

A feast in which the rare and the treasurable have a chance to shine

Sergey Prokofiev died on 5 March 1953, on the same day as Stalin. Perhaps that uncomfortable coincidence makes March the perfect time for a festival of Russian music. Pushkin House, the Russian cultural centre based in a Georgian villa in Bloomsbury, is holding one right now.

Christian Blackshaw, Wigmore Hall online review - pure as the driven snow

★★★★ CHRISTIAN BLACKSHAW, WIGMORE HALL Mozart and Schubert on their own terms

The British pianist takes Mozart and Schubert on their own terms

From a distance, the pianist Christian Blackshaw bears an uncanny resemblance to Franz Liszt, silver hair swept back à la 19th century. At the piano, though, you could scarcely find two more different musicians. There seems not to be a flamboyant bone in Blackshaw’s body.

Album: Chilly Gonzales – A Very Chilly Christmas

★★★★★ CHILLY GONZALES - A VERY CHILLY CHRISTMAS Find this under your tree and you'll be a winner

Find this under your tree and you'll be a winner

What a welcome present this is! Fresh yet familiar, evocative and captivating, this is the perfect antidote to the usual saccharine festive fodder. There’s only enough schmaltz one can stomach, only so many jingle bells one can tolerate before your nerves start to jangle. Especially this year. In fact, this a prescient offering.

Dame Fanny Waterman (1920-2020) - some recollections, with love and affection

DAME FANNY WATERMAN (1920-2020) Some recollections, with love and affection

The Leeds International Piano Competition's Artstic Director remembers its founder

Dame Fanny Waterman was a true force of nature, in the best sense of the word. Her diminutive height belied a giant intellectual force and a steely determination to achieve the seemingly unachievable through every means she could muster.

Zimerman, LSO, Rattle, LSO St Luke's review - rainbow colours, continuity and imperial soaring

★★★★★ ZIMERMAN, LSO, RATTLE, LSO ST LUKE'S The richest of palettes applied to Beethoven

The richest of palettes applied to Beethoven, while Stravinsky sings and dances

Adaptability backed up by funding has been the course of the most successful musical organisations since mid-March – but it’s been especially tough from November onwards.

Gabriele Carcano, Fidelio Orchestra Cafe - fresh, funny and focused Beethoven

The anniversary composer's wit at its most revelatory in this instalment of a sonatas cycle

Perhaps it’s just the conventional mind which celebrates the pathos, tragedy and triumph in Beethoven’s music at the expense of his humour. And that’s the one aspect of the composer which has been a constant revelation – to me, at any rate – in his anniversary year. Too often the laughs have been solitary, listening to CDs or watching online.

Paul Lewis, Wigmore Hall review – Classical consolations

★★★★★ PAUL LEWIS, WIGMORE HALL Haydn and Beethoven, putting life in perspective

Haydn and Beethoven's Diabelli Variations, putting life in perspective

The key of C minor threw a dark shadow over music long before it became the tonality for Beethoven to express the struggle of one against many in the Fifth Symphony and the Third Piano Concerto. Mozart was a feted teenager and Beethoven a babe in arms when Haydn wrote his C minor Piano Sonata in 1771, 60 years before Schumann began to make his own inner turmoil into music in the wake of Beethoven.

Isata Kanneh-Mason, BBCSSO, Gourlay online review - give thanks for lockdown concerts

★★★★ ISATA KANNEH-MASON, BBCSSO, GOURLAY A taste of modern America

A taste of modern America followed by sumptuous Beethoven

As our friends across the pond celebrated Thanksgiving on Thursday, a mix of music from America kicked off the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra’s concert, opening with Massachusetts-born composer Carl Ruggles’s Angels for muted brass. Ruggles originally penned the work in 1920 as the second movement of a three-part piece entitled Men and Angels.

theartsdesk Q&A: Mick Talbot of The Style Council

THEARTSDESK Q&A: MICK TALBOT The keyboard don discusses the ups and downs of life in The Style Council

The keyboard don discusses the very Eighties ups and downs of life in The Style Council

Following the break-up of The Jam in 1982, Mick Talbot (b 1958) was chosen by Paul Weller as his sparring partner in a new band, The Style Council. Talbot, a keyboard player from south London, had flourished amid the late-Seventies Mod revival, initially in the Merton Parkas, with his brother Danny, but also in The Chords, and even appearing on a couple of The Jam’s records.