Sakamoto's Kagami, Tin Drum, Roundhouse review - haunting virtual reality performance from late composer

★★★ SAKAMOTO'S KAGAMI, TIN DRUM, ROUNDHOUSE A haunting virtual reality performance

A technologically ambitious evening succeeds because of Sakamoto's beguiling curiosity

This mixed reality concert is simultaneously a dimension juggling conundrum, a philosophical puzzle, and a fascinating insight into what the future might hold. Composer Ryuichi Sakamoto – whose influences included Bach, John Cage and David Bowie – died in March last year, but still lives on in this curiously moving virtual event in which his performance was captured by 48 cameras at 60 frames a second.

Igor Levit, Wigmore Hall review - every note of Brahms’ late genius carefully weighed

★★★★ IGOR LEVIT, WIGMORE HALL All four sets of Brahms late piano pieces, but head rules heart

All four sets of late piano pieces in one concert, but head rules heart

Successful performances, conductor Robin Ticciati once suggested to me, are when “the head has a conversation with the heart”. The same goes, surely, for great music, though from personal experience one has to reach a certain age to find that true of Brahms. Last night Igor Levit seemed to favour the head, occasionally missing, for me, that very elusive something at the heart of Brahms’s late piano pieces.

BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Martin, Hoddinott Hall, Cardiff review - a host of horns in the wild woods

★★★★★ BBC NOW, MARTIN, HODDINOTT HALL, CARDIFF A host of horns in the wild woods

A fine new concerto and masterly playing

There were a lot of horns on display in the BBC NOW’s latest concert in Cardiff’s Hoddinott Hall. Brahms’s Second Symphony has four of them, and so does the Elegy for Brahms that Parry wrote on hearing of Brahms’s death in 1897. Gavin Higgins’s Horn Concerto, whose world premiere formed the programme’s centrepiece, has no less than five.

First Person: contralto Hilary Summers on going beyond her baroque and contemporary comfort zones

CONTRALTO HILARY SUMMERS on recording a wacky collaboration with Dutch colleagues

On recording 'Circus Dinogad', a wacky collaboration with distinguished Dutch colleagues

Back in the summer of 2020 when the arts industry was largely dormant and many professional singers were either moodily knocking back the gin or uploading poor quality phone videos of themselves bellowing Puccini arias from their doorsteps, I received an email.

SCO, Ilias-Kadesha, Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh review - Eastern promise sputters out

Orchestrally fine, but the guest was a finer director than soloist

Violinist Jonas Ilias-Kadesha was placed front and centre of the publicity for this concert. This is his first season concert with the SCO, though back in 2019 he stood in for an indisposed soloist at short notice for one of their European tours. Inviting him back is a vote of confidence, so I was looking forward to hearing him as soloist in Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Ravel’s Tzigane.

Classical CDs: Smocks, sins and sea swell

CLASSICAL CDS German art song, jazz standards on horn and a water-themed orchestral collection

German art song, jazz standards on horn and a water-themed orchestral collection

 

Anna Lucia challengeLICHT: 800 Years of German Lieder Anna Lucia Richter (mezzo-soprano), Ammiel Bushakevitz (hurdy gurdy, harpsichord, clavichord, fortepiano, piano) (SWR2/Challenge Classics)

Boris Giltburg, Wigmore Hall review - epic heaven and hell

★★★★★ BORIS GILTBURG, WIGMORE HALL Chameleonic Scriabin, Schumann and Chopin

Scriabin, Schumann and Chopin at their most chameleonic

With rapid, sleight-of-hand flicks between calm assurance and demonic agitation, Boris Giltburg turned in a coherent and epic recital that won’t be surpassed in 2024. Most pianists would quake simply at the thought of performing the four Chopin Scherzos in sequence; Giltburg set them up with phenomenal insights into Scriabin and Schumann.

Best of 2023: Classical CDs

BEST OF 2023: CLASSICAL MUSIC CDS A hand-picked selection of the year's finest releases

A hand-picked selection of the year's finest releases

 

Newby, Middleton, Wigmore Hall review - archly subversive interpretation of traditional themes

★★★★ NEWBY, MIDDLETON, WIGMORE HALL Subversive interpretation of traditional themes

Baritone and pianist perform an innovative repertoire featuring two world premieres

To understand the ambition of baritone James Newby, it helps to look up his video of Handel’s “Cara Pianta” from Apollo e Dafne. It would be remarkable by any standards for the fact that his head becomes gradually submerged by water while he’s delivering it, but Radiohead fans will also recognise it as a stylish parody of No Surprises performed by Thom Yorke.

Best of 2023: Classical music concerts

BEST OF 2023: CLASSICAL MUSIC No drop in orchestral high standards, and youth shines again

No drop in orchestral high standards, and youth shines again

However dark the future may seem for UK arts funding, each year begins with a beacon of light, passed on to shine twice more, in the Easter and summer holidays: the ever more resourceful and generous concertgiving of the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain, always among the highlights of the classical music scene.