Von Otter, BBCSO, Oramo, Barbican

VON OTTER, BBCSO, ORAMO, BARBICAN Subtle heartbreak in Ravel and poleaxing Nielsen crown another concert stunner

Subtle heartbreak in Ravel and poleaxing Nielsen crown another concert stunner

Hair-raising guaranteed or your money back: that might have been a publicity gambit, had there been one, for Sakari Oramo’s latest journey with the BBC Symphony Orchestra around a Nielsen symphony. That he knows the ropes to scale the granite cliff face of the Danish composer’s Fourth, “Inextinguishable”, Symphony was not in doubt (he gave a shattering performance with his own City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra at the 1999 Proms).

Becker, RLPO, Ang, Liverpool Philharmonic Hall

New double-bass concerto doesn't go far enough in an intriguing programme

While there is, of course, safety in numbers, but five premieres on four continents is, perhaps, a little novel. Tan Dun’s new Concerto for Double-Bass, subtitled Wolf Totem, is a co-commission by five orchestras: the Royal Concertgebouw, St Louis Symphony, the Taiwan Philharmonic, the Tasmanian Symphony and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic.The principal bass player in each orchestra is to be soloist and the piece received its world première last month in Amsterdam.

Hannigan, Uchida, Philharmonia, Salonen, Royal Festival Hall

A magical, delightful Ravel opera in an imaginative semi-staging

While the Berlin Philharmonic's progress through London with Simon Rattle has grabbed the column inches away from the rest of the capital's classical music offerings this week, a delightful mostly Ravel programme from the Philharmonia should not be passed over.

Shadows of War, Birmingham Royal Ballet, Sadler's Wells

SHADOWS OF WAR, BIRMINGHAM ROYAL BALLET, SADLER'S WELLS Atmospheric revival of 1944 Miracle in the Gorbals, the centrepiece of an unusual triple bill

Atmospheric revival of 1944 Miracle in the Gorbals, the centrepiece of an unusual triple bill

Another week, another war commemorative; it’s the story of all the arts in 2014. But – because you can always rely on David Bintley and Birmingham Royal Ballet to be different – last night’s programme at Sadler’s was overshadowed by the Second World War, not the First. Nor were there any soldiers or war widows to be seen: instead this remarkable mixed programme danced from the doomed brightness of the inter-war generation, to religious experience in war-torn Clydeside, to a kilt-girt, abstract, bittersweet lament.

Mullova, Hallé, Elder, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester

No dancers but much drama in Daphnis et Chloé, plus ravishing Russian violin

Sir Mark Elder has a penchant for taking on large-scale works in Manchester, from operatic concert performances of Wagner and Verdi to Hollywood musicals. Following that line, he kicked off the new Hallé season with Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloé ballet score in its entirety, described by the composer as “a vast musical fresco faithful to the Greece of my dreams”. We are used to hearing the odd suite, but rarely the whole work. 

Proms Chamber Music 7: Benjamin Grosvenor/Prom 60: Driver, RPO, Dutoit

GROSVENOR PREMIERES WEIR, DUTOIT CONDUCTS RESPIGHI AT THE PROMS Rainbow colours from pianist and conductor with a cooling shower or two

Rainbow colours with a cooling shower or two in Proms showpiece time

After the enervating excesses of Salome and Elektra at the weekend, the abundance of notes at the Proms continued in a piano recital and an orchestral showstopper, but this time with built-in air conditioning. After all, both 22-year-old Benjamin Grosvenor and septuagenarian Charles Dutoit are absolutely in control of the colours they make, very occasionally too much so. But it was a rainbow-hued day inside the Cadogan and Royal Albert Halls, culminating in a spectacular and perhaps unrepeatable Respighi triple bill of Roman impressions.

Prom 46: West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, Barenboim

PROM 46: WEST-EASTERN DIVAN ORCHESTRA, BARENBOIM Subtle touches but too little passionate abandon in this fine team's lopsided programme

Subtle touches but too little passionate abandon in this fine team's lopsided programme

By the time we got to the end of this Prom, with four of the five encores – the whole of Bizet’s Carmen Suite – cannily crafted to bolster the short official programme, most of the rightly euphoric audience had forgotten the most unsatisfying first half so far this season. Perhaps I start from an ungenerous standpoint.

Prom 27: Trusler, BBCNOW, Wigglesworth/Inspire Workshop, Royal Albert Hall

PROM 27: TRUSLER, BBCNOW, WIGGLESWORTH/INSPIRE WORKSHOP Youth and experience take turns in lighting up Elgar

Youth and experience take turns in lighting up Elgar, while a violinist dazzles in a lesser work

A full day began and ended with Elgar the European, or rather the citizen of the world. After all, the Pomp and Circumstance March No.

Simon Trpčeski, Wigmore Hall

SIMON TRPČESKI, WIGMORE HALL A Macedonian magician whose still waters run deep

A Macedonian magician whose still waters run deep

No man is a prophet in his own land – except possibly the Macedonian pianist Simon Trpčeski. In the UK he shot to fame upon winning the London International Piano Competition in 2001 and at home he has become a national hero, his efforts rebooting the country’s classical music scene and inspiring the building of a new full-scale concert hall in Skopje – even though he is still a mere 35. He is also celebrated there as a popular songwriter. That, though, is a strand he left outside the Wigmore Hall, offering a programme that contained as much dark introspection as it did extroversion.