GRAMOPHONE Review: Shostakovich Symphony No. 8 – London Symphony Orchestra/Noseda
I always think that the opening bars of this war-torn essay suggest the flip side, the oppressively dark side, of the Fifth Symphony. No more ‘A Soviet artist’s reply to just criticism’, simply a Soviet artist’s outrage.…
Patti LuPone in conversation with Edward Seckerson
Sunday 10th March 2019 7pm Theatre Royal Haymarket Broadway legend and two-time Tony Award winner Patti LuPone sits down with writer and broadcaster Edward Seckerson to talk about her rich and varied career. From her auspicious beginnings…
GRAMOPHONE: From Where I Sit – December 2018
The recent revival of The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess at English National Opera and the prospect of comparing all its available recordings in BBC Radio 3’s Record Review early next year has prompted me to look a…
GRAMOPHONE Review: Stravinsky Petrushka/Jeu de Cartes – Mariinsky Orchestra/Gergiev
Bold local colours are pretty much a given for Petrushka with this orchestra and this conductor in this location. But the vividness and ‘authenticity’ (not a word I generally use) of the characterisation took even me a…
GRAMOPHONE Review: Mahler Symphony No. 6 – MusicAeterna/Currentzis
Anyone who thrilled (as I did) to Teodor Currentzis’ Tchaikovsky Pathetique will find distinct parallels here. The impulse, the imperative, of this Mahler 6 is extraordinary – a headlong ride to the abyss with every rhythm and…
GRAMOPHONE Review: Broadway – Renée Fleming, BBC Concert Orchestra/Fisher
After her previous forays into jazz and inde-pop to say nothing of her recent stint on Broadway as Nettie Fowler in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Carousel it was almost inevitable that a Broadway album would be forthcoming from…
GRAMOPHONE Review: Bernstein Wonderful Town – Soloists, London Symphony Orchestra/Rattle
I’ve always been slightly puzzled as to why Simon Rattle (and subsequently Mark Elder) chose to anoint this particular show amongst Bernstein’s Broadway canon – not because I don’t love it as dearly as the others but…
GRAMOPHONE Review: There’s A Place For Us – Nadine Sierra, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Spano
Why does everything nowadays have to be marketed with an angle, a message? There are no more recital discs, just albums. That’s a way of connecting the classical and pop worlds – I see that. But do…
GRAMOPHONE Review: Mahler Symphony No. 3 – Larsson, Düsseldorfer Symphoniker/Fischer
Eight unison horns dramatically announce Mahler’s pantheistic hymn to the natural world and if the opening bars of Adam Fischer’s refreshingly spontaneous account sounded a tad jaded to my ears it was almost certainly because I cannot…
GRAMOPHONE: From Where I Sit – November 2018
It’s at this time of the year, with yet another Henry Wood Promenade season behind us, that the question perennially arises – where do those huge Proms audiences disappear to for the rest of the year? Do…