Under African Skies

UNDER AFRICAN SKIES: Paul Simon's Graceland phenomenon is revisited in a superb documentary

Paul Simon's Graceland phenomenon revisited in superb documentary

The world is awash with rock docs, most of them not very good, but it's best to think of Under African Skies as merely a superb piece of film-making. Marking the 25th anniversary of Paul Simon's Graceland, and included on DVD with the album's special reissue package, it's a gripping exploration of how Simon went to South Africa searching for fresh inspiration, made possibly the most memorable album of his career, but found himself embroiled in the poisonous politics of apartheid.

10cc, Royal Albert Hall

Celebration of two decades of great British pop with needless distractions

Some things just don’t need saying. “If you know the chorus to this one, please join in” comes the invitation from the stage just before “Dreadlock Holiday”. On the final date of 10cc’s 40th anniversary tour it was unlikely that anyone at the Royal Albert Hall didn’t know the chorus. Actually, it’s unlikely that anyone, anywhere, doesn’t know the chorus.

BBC Proms 2012 In Full

Full listings of all this year's 76 Proms at the Royal Albert Hall

The 2012 BBC Proms open on 13 July and end on 8 September. This is the full list of the 76 concerts. Book tickets here.

theASHtray: Homeland, Kings of Leon, and we need to talk about Aïda

Yeah butt, no butt: our new columnist sifts through the fag-ends of the cultural week

So Homeland is here, and mid-ranking-CIA-operative Claire Danes is chasing Marine-Sergeant-and-possible-al-Qaeda-double-agent Damian Lewis all over the shop (but really only in their heads, so far), and neither of them is getting anywhere fast, so Claire goes home for a kip and sticks on some relaxing music, and would you Adam ‘n’ Eve it? – another bloody jazz nerd!

The Wonderful World of Captain Beaky, Royal Albert Hall

Charity extravaganza reproduces the loved and loathed family favourite of 30 years ago

The Rhythm Method by Nicky Forbes dives into the working, gigging, cash-free underbelly of real rock’n’roll life. Whereas most music biographies are written by or about those who’ve made it, who live in the gilded cage of pop stardom and all that entails, The Rhythm Method is about Forbes’s life as drummer in The Revillos, a cartoonish post-punk outfit born from the ashes of the more successful Rezillos. It is a chattily told saga of bad decisions, misfortune, dissolution and a persistent inability to realise when the game is over.

George Michael, Royal Albert Hall

GEORGE MICHAEL: Pop classics with strings attached as the former Wham! man gets orchestrated

Pop classics with strings attached as the former Wham! man gets orchestrated

With the scheduled start time of last night's gig long gone and George Michael nowhere in sight, scurrilous jokes, gossip and unfounded rumours were floating around the Royal Albert Hall. We won't reprint them here but, needless to say, funny ciggies and Hampstead Heath were being mentioned. George's offstage antics might keep the red tops interested, but once he kicked the show off, backed by a 41-piece orchestra for the opening performance of the London run of his Symphonica tour, his glittering musical pedigree was absolutely centre stage.

Spiritualized, Royal Albert Hall

SPIRITUALIZED, ROYAL ALBERT HALL: Gospel according to Spaceman: Jason Pierce's new material finally sees the light

Gospel according to Spaceman: Jason Pierce's new material finally sees the light

Two years ago, Spiritualized reprised their bestselling (one might say "only major") 1997 album, Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space, in the curiously titled concert series, Don't Look Back. Since then, their frontman (one might say "only notable band member") Jason "Spaceman" Pierce has been constantly promising new material, along with persistent assurances that the band's (would-be) seventh album will hearken back to the glory days of yester-millennium and also have a more-than-usual inclination toward pop.

The Last Night of the Proms, Bullock, Lang Lang, BBCSO, Gardner

TAD AT 5 AT THE PROMS: LAST NIGHT 2011 Susan Bullock as Britannia-Brünnhilde, Lang Lang reborn

Night of quality music-making - but phooey to the flags

Stately females sailed the corridors like grand multicoloured liners. Grown men in boaters and Union Jack waistcoats raced balloons to the Royal Albert Hall ceiling. Beachballs. Streamers. Flags. Fancy dress. One St George's Cross read "Votes for Women!" My first thoughts were: how lovely, in a way, that the mentally ill are allowed a day out like this.

BBC Proms: Der Freischütz, Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique, Gardiner

Seminal operatic rarity given bracing and brilliant outing

What kind of work could possibly elbow aside the time-honoured ritual of performing Beethoven's Ninth on the penultimate (ie, the last serious) night of the Proms? The kind that even Beethoven was gobsmacked by. That's the sort of reputation that stalks Carl Maria von Weber's Der Freischütz, the prototype German Romantic opera, to whose crepuscular, horn-encrusted, tremolo-saturated, harmonic daredevilling and dramatic Gothicism the whole 19th century (and even Mahler and Strauss) paid homage.

BBC Proms: Jansen, Philadelphia Orchestra, Dutoit

Supreme, epic Tchaikovsky numbers among the best of this year's concertos

After filing for bankruptcy earlier this year, the Philadelphia Orchestra seemed poised to be the flagship cultural casualty of the financial crisis. Five months on and the bills continue to rise, but in the best Titanic tradition the band are determinedly playing on. It’s been five years since we last heard them at the Proms and their return last night under Chief Conductor Charles Dutoit saw a capacity crowd turn out to show their support and to hear the glossy music-making for which this orchestra is so justly celebrated.