Classical Music/Opera direct to home 8 - from troubled royal rituals to a lone cellist

CLASSICAL MUSIC/OPERA DIRECT TO HOME 8 From royal rituals to a lone cellist

Pick of the week's best pre-recorded operas and livestream comings-together

Inventiveness waxes ever stronger, it seems, in quarantine, as do the number of faces and instrumental sounds gathered together at any one time.

The Cellist/Dances at a Gathering, Royal Ballet review - A grand love affair with a cello

★★★★ THE CELLIST/DANCES AT A GATHERING, ROYAL BALLET A grand love affair with a cello

The relationship between a great musician and her instrument, vividly imagined in dance

The cello is the stringed instrument most closely aligned to the human voice. It has a human shape, too, so in theory it was a short step for choreographer Cathy Marston to give it a living, breathing presence in her ballet about the legendary cellist Jacqueline du Pré. But what a giant leap of imagination that turned out to be.

Gautier Capuçon, Yuja Wang, Barbican review - spellbinding moments in circumscribed programme

★★★ GAUTIER CAPUÇON, YUJA WANG  Spellbinding moments in circumscribed programme

It takes Piazzolla to ignite an audience after sophisticated Franck and Chopin

Why go to hear a cello-and-piano recital in a large hall, and a rather unsatisfying programme (delayed without explanation for 15 minutes, incidentally) spotlighting a transcription of a work which was created for the violin?

Kanneh-Mason, LMP, Martín, Fairfield Halls review – modest mastery on show

★★★★ KANNEH-MASON, LMP, MARTIN, FAIRFIELD HALLS French polish from the cello star of the moment

French polish from the cello star of the moment

The soap-opera saga of the House of Windsor may not have been what the executive director of the London Mozart Players had in mind when she announced from the stage that Sheku Kanneh-Mason “is completely relevant for us”. Four years on from winning BBC Young Musician and two years since playing at the wedding of the wantaway Duke and Duchess of Sussex, the 20-year-old cellist bears an impossibly heavy burden summed up in another dread phrase, “the future of classical music”.

Wallfisch, Northern Chamber Orchestra, Stoller Hall, Manchester review - Weinberg UK premiere

★★★★ WALLFISCH, NCO, STOLLER HALL, MANCHESTER Weinberg UK premiere

Subtlety and haunting qualities in a little gem for solo cello and string orchestra

Everyone’s doing Weinberg now, or so it seems. The Polish-born composer who became a close friend of Shostakovich was born 100 years ago, and there’s plenty of his music to go round.

Mitten wir im Leben sind, De Keersmaeker, Queyras, Rosas, Sadler's Wells review - Bach-worthy genius

Outwardly austere, inwardly vibrant life-and-death journey through the six Cello Suites

All Bach is dance, a teacher once told me. The justifiable exaggeration switched on a light; leaping to the Brandenburg Concertos followed. This great work of kinetic art is of a different order. Choreographer and performer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker represents the pure but vibrant mastery of the Cello Suites in the way that the soul moves with them, responsive to every hyper-dance form, key and modulation.

Biss, Philharmonia, Boyd, RFH review – compulsive life-force

★★★★ BISS, PHILHARMONIA, BOYD, RFH Polished Mozart complements late Schubert

Polished Mozart complements late Schubert living in the moment

Mozart in E flat (the Overture to The Marriage of Figaro) and in G (the K.453 Piano Concerto), and Schubert in C – the “Great” C major Symphony, no less – ushered spring into the Festival Hall on a warm and sunny Sunday afternoon.

Hallé, Elder, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review – pictorial, dramatic power

★★★★ HALLE, ELDER, BRIDGEWATER HALL Mancunian players excel at home in Elgar, Strauss

Mancunian players excel on home ground in Elgar and Strauss

Sir Mark Elder’s first concert in the Hallé Thursday series for 2018-19 was on clearly mapped Hallé territory – Richard Strauss and Elgar. They have a reputation, and a tradition, of playing these composers’ music very well. They’ve already recorded Elgar's Second Symphony and, judging by the microphones around the platform, they’re doing the same right now with Strauss’s Don Quixote.

theartsdesk at Itinéraire Baroque 2018 - canaries in front of a Périgord altar

THE ARTS DESK AT ITINERAIRE BAROQUE 2018 Canaries in front of a Périgord altar

Distinguished Dordogne dweller Ton Koopman and friends meet in a Romanesque priory

Brits are the folk you expect to encounter the most in the rural-England-on-steroids of the beautiful Dordogne. In my experience they outnumber the French, at least in high summer, not just as visitors and retired homeowners but also as artisans selling their wares in Riberac's big Friday market.