The Glass Piano, Print Room at The Coronet review – fascinating story undermined by absurdism
The production's levity eviscerates the underpinning emotional realities
Often the greatest works of dramatic absurdism spring from the worst extremes of human experience, whether it’s Ionesco’s Rhinoceros responding to fascism, or Havel’s The Garden Party satirising the irrational cruelties of Prague’s Soviet occupiers.
St Matthew Passion, Ex Cathedra, Skidmore, Symphony Hall Birmingham - powerful, poignant Bach
Simple and nuanced performance of a supreme masterpiece
For the final instalment of their three Matthew Passions this Holy Week, Ex Cathedra gave a large scale performance of Bach’s oratorio in their home town on Birmingham, after dates with lesser forces in London and Bristol. With an augmented orchestra and their regular chamber choir and orchestra joined onstage by Ex Cathedra’s Academy of Vocal Music - Ex Cathedra’s strand for young singers - and members of various community choirs in and around BIrmingham, the collective masses on stage made a full, fabulous sound, which filled Symphony Hall.
In the spirit of the composer as innovator: Samir Savant on the London Handel Festival
Bach St John Passion, Les Arts Florissants, Christie, Barbican review – sombre but engaging
An atmospheric but unfocused reading, elevated by a fine Evangelist
Bach B minor Mass, BBCSO, Butt, Barbican review - large-scale losses and a few gains
Stylish principles applied to a big chorus and modern instruments with limited success
Practitioners of musical authenticity and scholarly research, so guarded and protective of their territory in the early days, now like to spread the love around.
'Bringing things to life is what opera is all about': Robert Howarth on a 'Magic Flute' with a difference
Opera North's Mozart conductor on taking a careful look at a masterpiece
I’m here in Leeds at the end of five weeks of quite intense rehearsals for Opera North's new production of Mozart's The Magic Flute. Our director James Brining and his amazing team (including assistant director Deborah Cohen, set and costume designer Colin Richmond, and choreographer Tim Claydon) are putting it on the stage, and I’m ably assisted by George Jackson and Philip Voldman.
The Favourite review - scintillatingly warped portrait of the court of Queen Anne
Yorgos Lanthimos's mischievous analysis of royal deviousness and dysfunction
It can be fascinating to see ourselves as others see us. In this case, Athens-born director Yorgos Lanthimos (The Killing of a Sacred Deer, The Lobster) brings his acute eye to the English country-house period drama in a scintillatingly warped portrait of the dysfunctional court of Queen Anne.
Classical CDs Weekly: Josquin, Calidore String Quartet, Ronn McFarlane
Renaissance choral music and dramatic string quartets, plus a solo disc from a master lutenist
Josquin: Missa Gaudeamus, Missa L’ami Baudichon The Tallis Scholars/Peter Phillips (Gimell)
Federico Colli, Wigmore Hall review – poised on the edge of the possible
The young Italian pianist brings a fantastical, probing imagination to a chewy programme
The Italian pianist Federico Colli, 30, best known so far as winner of the 2012 Leeds International Piano Competition, last night arrived for his Wigmore Hall debut sporting an emerald-green cravat, but the sonic colours he magicked out of the piano quickly put its gleam in the shade. He is an artist developing at an impressive rate, and one of whom I think we’ll be hearing a great deal more in years ahead.