Classical CDs Weekly: John Cage, Schubert, Stravinsky

CLASSICAL CDS WEEKLY: JOHN CAGE, SCHUBERT, STRAVINSKY Multiple versions of a 100 year old ballet score, a youthful cycle of symphonies and a comprehensive survey of music by a true original

Multiple versions of a 100 year old ballet score, a youthful cycle of symphonies and a comprehensive survey of music by a true original

 

John Cage 100 Various artists (Wergo)

Spassov, LSO, Järvi, Barbican Hall

Balkan fever proves dangerously contagious

The tabloids are getting shriller every day in their warnings about the army of Bulgarians and Romanians about to descend on British shores, so it’s probably lucky that none of their journalists was present last night at the Barbican to witness an Eastern European musical coup of deadly efficiency. Kristjan Järvi and the London Symphony Orchestra may have cleared the path with a little help from Enescu and Kodály, but it was Bulgarian virtuoso performer-composer Theodosii Spassov – playing an instrument no one had ever heard of – who routed us completely.

Schwitters in Britain, Tate Britain

Forgotten German emigré or imaginative fireball who influenced British art? The last eight years of a creative life examined

The Pop Art collages of Richard Hamilton and Eduardo Paolozzi and, more recently, the wayward sculptures and installations of artists like Phyllida Barlow would be unthinkable without the inspirational presence in Britain of Kurt Schwitters. Yet the German emigré is hardly a household name.

LSO, St Lawrence String Quartet, Adams, Barbican

LSO, ST LAWRENCE STRING QUARTET, ADAMS, BARBICAN John Adams's London residency comes to a witty and thought-provoking close

John Adams's London residency comes to a witty and thought-provoking close

And so John Adams’s residency with the London Symphony Orchestra reaches its finale – a brisk allegro of a concert with a cheeky coda in the form of the composer’s latest orchestral work, Absolute Jest.

The Dream of Gerontius, LPO, Elder, Royal Festival Hall

THE DREAM OF GERONTIUS, LPO, ELDER, ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL Elgar's oratorio at its Wagnerian finest under Elder

Elgar's oratorio at its Wagnerian finest under Elder

We’re still in the foothills of the Southbank Centre’s year-long The Rest is Noise festival, but already the harmonic ground is becoming unsteady underfoot. Last weekend saw the gemütlichkeit of Johann Strauss give way to the brutality of Richard Strauss, exposed us to the moistly chromatic flesh of Salome that lies behind the seven veils, and showed just a hint of Schoenbergian ankle. So surely this weekend’s return to 1900 and Elgar’s choral-society-stalwart The Dream of Gerontius is something of a retreat?

Q&A Special: Memories of Lutosławski

Q&A SPECIAL: MEMORIES OF LUTOSLAWSKI In his centenary year Poland's greatest 20th-century composer is remembered by colleagues and family

In his centenary year Poland's greatest 20th-century composer is remembered by colleagues and family

While the history of 20th-century music is undoubtedly the history of the 20th century – from the decadent expressionism of fin-de-siècle Berlin to the imagined surrealist worlds of 1920s Paris – few composers lived or wrote the century quite as vividly as Witold Lutosławski. He is celebrating his centenary this year. Although latterly obscured by the reputations of his countrymen Szymanowski and Penderecki, Lutosławski’s music combines lyricism and a fiercely rigorous formalism to produce works whose narrative force is unequalled.

Onegin, Royal Ballet

ONEGIN, ROYAL BALLET Onegin is not in Russia, but in Melodrama-Land. It's the dancers who make or break the evening

Onegin is not in Russia, but in Melodrama-Land. It's the dancers who make or break the evening

The worldwide success of John Cranko’s 1960s version of Tchaikovsky’s opera, in turn an adaptation of Pushkin’s verse-drama, might have taken even the choreographer by surprise. Tchaikovsky himself worried that “Pushkin’s exquisite texture will be vulgarized if it is transferred to the stage”, and added, “How delighted I am to be rid of Ethiopian princesses, Pharaohs, poisonings, all the conventional stuff.”

Mattila, Hampson, LPO, Jurowski, Royal Festival Hall

MATTILA, HAMPSON, LPO, JUROWSKI, RFH Richard Strauss's odyssey towards the voluptuous horrors of Salome: ambitious in principal, flawed in practice

Richard Strauss's odyssey towards the voluptuous horrors of Salome: ambitious in principal, flawed in practice

This may have been the official, lavish fanfare for the Southbank’s The Rest is Noise Festival, which if the hard sell hasn’t hit you yet is a year-long celebration of 20th Century music in its cultural context and based around Alex Ross's bestseller of the same name. For Jurowski and the LPO, though, it was very much through-composed programme planning as usual, though with a sweeping bow towards the festival theme of how modernism evolved as it did.

Grosvenor, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Litton, Barbican Hall

GROSVENOR, BBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, LITTON, BARBICAN HALL English scores reaching out to the world in a meeting of young talent and old mastery

English scores reaching out to the world in a meeting of young talent and old mastery

Elgar declared a “massive hope in the future” as the human programme behind his epic First Symphony’s final exultant sprint. That hope was sprinkled like gold dust around the featured artists of this all-English concert. There are good reasons to be optimistic about the effective, colourful scores of 32-year-old Anna Clyne; we know that Benjamin Grosvenor, her junior by 12 years, is already a pianist of mercurial assurance, a real front-runner.

Mr Selfridge, ITV1

MR SELFRIDGE, ITV The King pays a visit as retailing saga reaches end of series tonight

One man's chutzpah changes the face of British shopping in Andrew Davies' lavish, fast-moving drama

Welcome to the marble halls of Mr Selfridge. All the world, in ITV’s new costumer (in every sense), isn’t a stage - it’s a shop. And bestriding his eponymous Oxford Street emporium, which we saw in this first episode in the run-up to its 1909 grand opening, like a colossus is Jeremy Piven as Harry Gordon Selfridge, the American who came from his native Chicago to open the world’s finest department store of its time.