The Seckerson Tapes: Colin Currie

The Scottish musician on the logistics of being a percussionist

The evolution of the solo percussionist has advanced dramatically over the last couple of decades and among the superstars of the hardware that can be struck and pounded or caressed and stroked is the flying Scotsman Colin Currie, whose profile has steadily grown since becoming the first percussionist ever to reach the finals of the BBC Young Musician of the Year in 1994.

Sir Patrick Moore, Xylophonist and Composer

The people's star-man was an avid composer, with three operas and 70 marches and waltzes to his name

The astronomer Sir Patrick Moore was a keen composer of decided musical preferences, and no mean xylophonist. The news of his death on Sunday reminded me of my hugely enjoyable encounter with him - for musical reasons - for the Daily Telegraph in October 1998, heralding the release of a recording of his tunes.

From Foot to Foot, How Rhythm Travelled the World

FROM FOOT TO FOOT: As flamenco engulfs London, it's only a localised sign of a universal urge

As flamenco engulfs London, it's only a localised sign of a universal urge to kick up the heels

Two hundred years ago in Durham taverns you could find men in wooden clogs clattering on the tables, with their mates pressing their ears to the underside of the surface. Meanwhile, at the other end of the world, African slaves with bare feet were shuffling on dirt with metal bottle caps held between their toes. Now picture a Mediterranean gypsy dancing of sorrow and pain with swirling shawls and angrily pounding heels. Three quite different scenes, different places, different eras, but all rooted in one human impulse, common the world over.

Survivor, Hofesh Shechter & Anthony Gormley, Barbican Theatre

HOFESH SHECHTER & ANTONY GORMLEY: How is it possible for a show with 200 drummers to be a damp squib?

Is it possible for a show with 200 drummers to be a damp squib? It is now

Empty vessels make the most noise. That pithy old aphorism floated into my head a scant few minutes into the much-heralded new work by the undoubtedly talented, but here way off-beam, Hofesh Shechter. And again, a few minutes later. And again, and again, as something like 200 drummers filled the stage and bashed away in earnest polyrhythmy. At the end of the 80 minutes my watch was worn with checking.

Tubular Bells, The Charles Hazlewood All Stars, St George's Bristol

TUBULAR BELLS: A classic of the 1970s provides an ear-opening lesson in Minimalism, courtesy of The Charles Hazlewood All Stars

A classic of the 1970s provides an ear-opening lesson in Minimalism

Tubular Bells, the first half of which is being currently revived as a live piece in the UK, sold between 15 and 17 million units worldwide. Quite apart from the work’s innocence being co-opted and made spooky in William Friedkin's The Exorcist, there was something about Mike Oldfield’s first stab at quasi-symphonic rock which seduced the music-consuming public.

My Summer Reading: Percussionist Colin Currie

The trailblazing musician picks his top summer reads

Third in line to share their summer reading selection with theartsdesk is Colin Currie (b 1976), the leading percussionist of his generation. A driving force behind new percussion repertoire for more than a decade, in 2000 Currie was awarded the Royal Philharmonic Society Young Artist Award for his inspirational role in contemporary music and is in the unique position of being the only instrumentalist to enjoy close collaborative relationships with many of the leading composers of today, notably Rautavaara, Steve Reich and Elliott Carter

Royal New Zealand Ballet, From Here to There, Barbican Theatre

A fine talent among their ranks is one of several plus-points for the Kiwi dancers

All ballet companies dream of finding a genuine creative talent among their ranks, and the Royal New Zealand Ballet, visiting from the farthest end of the world ballet map, have one in Andrew Simmons. The unknown name on their triple bill on this rare visit to London shows a young mind drawn naturally to grace and understated expressiveness.

Hofesh Shechter, Political Mother: The Choreographer's Cut, Sadler's Wells

A ferocious wall of sound - and sight

Only three years ago, Hofesh Shechter, the Israeli-born, London-based choreographer, made the leap into the big leagues, almost overnight, with his Uprising/In Your Rooms double bill. The following year he produced a "Choreographer’s Cut", a bulked-up version in the Roundhouse, part dance, part gig. 2010’s Political Mother was received with rapture, so what next?

theartsdesk in Cheltenham: Seven Concerts in Two Days

Neoclassical spa town wakes up to skewed chamber music and zestful percussion

For so many days a year, Cheltenham's Regency symmetry and conservative values totter and buckle as they veer dangerously towards relative festive liberalism. As I sliced into one of the four annual beanfeasts, the Cheltenham Music Festival, it struck me how well lopsided, sometimes painful bendings of a classical framework by Schumann and Brahms sat with a battery of volatile percussion celebrating Steve Reich's 75th birthday. Even the adventure served up by trebles over in Norman and medieval Tewkesbury glimpsed a beast in the jungle.