Virtuoso Violinists at the BBC, BBC Four

VIRTUOSO VIOLINISTS AT THE BBC, BBC FOUR Nicola Benedetti takes a fascinating archive voyage around her instrument and its heroes

Nicola Benedetti takes a fascinating archive voyage around her instrument and its heroes

Virtuoso Violinists was an hour of unalloyed informative pleasure that toured televised highlights of great violinists playing great music. Its painless excursion into the western classical canon reminded us why the BBC is the NHS of culture, and we delighted here in a guide who proved as accomplished a presenter as she is a performer of genius.

Classical CDs Weekly: Bartók, Brahms, Copland, Wien-Berlin Brass Quintet

CLASSICAL CDS WEEKLY A pair of violin concertos, uncut Americana and chamber music for brass

A pair of violin concertos, uncut Americana and chamber music for brass


Brahms: Violin Concerto, Bartók: Violin Concerto No 1 Janine Jansen (violin) Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, London Symphony Orchestra/Antonio Pappano (Decca)

Trio Shaham Erez Wallfisch, Wigmore Hall

Full-blooded music-making from a streamlined ensemble

Some chamber ensembles flourish through creative conflict, contrast and tension. Others streamline their approach, not so much relinquishing individuality as allowing the best of each to blend into more than the sum of their parts. The Trio Shaham Erez Wallfisch has grown, in its five-year existence, to be one of the latter.

Barenboim 60th Anniversary Concert, Simón Bolívar SO, Dudamel, RFH

BARENBOIM 60TH ANNIVERSARY CONCERT, SIMON BOLIVAR SO, DUDAMEL, RFH Monumental Brahms concertos celebrate six decades of RFH performances

Monumental Brahms concertos celebrate six decades of RFH performances

The memories were flooding back last night. Daniel Barenboim's speech after the concert, lasting about a quarter of an hour, contained vivid recollections of his first appearance on that stage in 1956 as a 13-year-old (playing the Mozart A major Concerto with the RPO and Josef Krips). There was a welling-up of emotion as he summoned back memories of the RFH stage from his time living in London: “I remember Jacqueline...Barbirolli.” And a decade with the English Chamber Orchestra.

Watkins, BBCSO, Bychkov, Barbican

WATKINS, BBCSO, BYCHKOV, BARBICAN An impressive programme, offering elegant Haydn and dynamic Brahms

An impressive programme, offering elegant Haydn and dynamic Brahms

We don’t often hear Semyon Bychkov in the core Austro-German repertoire. That’s a great shame, because the qualities that make his Russian music performances so special are just as valuable here: the dynamism and immediacy, the supple but propulsive phrasing, and, above all, the firm, guiding hand, exerting control without imposing restraint.

Hadland / Moser Brothers, Wigmore Hall

HADLAND / MOSER BROTHERS, WIGMORE HALL Two concerts show full-toned lucidity from the Norwegian, electric charge from the German-born duo

Two concerts show full-toned lucidity from the Norwegian, electric charge from the German-born duo

Prokofiev milestones stood proudly at the ends of the New Year’s first three major UK concert programmes.

Leonskaja 70th Birthday Concert, Wigmore Hall

LEONSKAJA 70TH BIRTHDAY CONCERFT, WIGMORE HALL Great pianist, great company: the classiest and most generous of celebrations

Great pianist, great company: the classiest and most generous of celebrations

It was a massive but never overbearing three-parter, a three-and-a-half hour celebration, a mini-festival of youth and experience. Wouldn’t we all want to mark a major birthday in the company of friends of all ages?

Skride, CBSO, Wellber, Symphony Hall Birmingham

Brahms's First is transformed - but Schumann's Violin Concerto remains beyond rescue

If Omer Meir Wellber is making a bid for Andris Nelsons’s old music directorship in Birmingham, he could hardly have signalled his intentions more audaciously. This concert began with Wagner’s Lohengrin Prelude and ended with Brahms’s First Symphony – basically a surgical strike into the heartlands of Nelsons’s repertoire. And as soloist, he had the Latvian violinist Baiba Skride – an artist who was introduced to Birmingham by Nelsons and who appeared with the CBSO on disc and in concert throughout Nelsons’s tenure.

SCO, Ticciati, Usher Hall, Edinburgh

Joyful Brahms from Scotland's finest orchestra and its bracing principal conductor

The justification for playing Brahms with a chamber orchestra is well rehearsed. In fact, I have on my desk a Telarc boxed set of the four symphonies “in the style of the original Meiningen performances”, recorded by the Scottish Chamber Orchestra under the visionary Sir Charles Mackerras in 1997. Then, as now, the idea was to lighten the texture and give greater prominence to the woodwind. By drawing back the dense curtain of string sound, the light could shine through and Brahms’ contrapuntal delicacy be revealed.

Shibe, Egmont Ensemble, Wigmore Hall

Could a young guitarist and piano trio possibly improve upon this perfection?

It was a sad coincidence that this Monday Platform “showcasing talented young artists” took place only weeks after the death in a road accident of Roderick Lakin, Director of Arts for 31 years at the Royal Over-Seas League which was last night's backer. For no concert could have been more sensitively tuned to a personal farewell. Overt melancholy only surfaced in the slow-movement theme of Brahms’s Second Piano Trio. But wouldn’t you want Dowland, Bach and Schubert at your memorial concert?