Edward Seckerson
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Top Posts & Pages

  • GRAMOPHONE Review: Prokofiev Romeo and Juliet - Los Angeles Philharmonic/Dudamel

Popular Podcasts

  • A Conversation With LIISA RANDALU: Schumann Quartet release 2nd CD
  • A Conversation With DAME JANET BAKER
  • ENCOUNTERS: Edward Seckerson talks to Broadway composer LUCY SIMON
  • A Conversation With VICTORIA WOOD: New TV drama, ‘Loving Miss Hatto’
  • A Conversation With VASILY PETRENKO: RLPO Shostakovich Symphonies
  • Edward Seckerson talks to RENÉE FLEMING about The Light in the Piazza
  • A Conversation With JOHN RUTTER
  • A Conversation With DAVID McVICAR & SARAH CONNOLLY: Charpentier’s ‘Medea’
  • A Conversation With JULIAN OVENDEN
  • A Conversation With SIR PAUL McCARTNEY: BBC Radio 4 Kaleidoscope
  • Classical Music,  Reviews

    Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Rattle, Royal Festival Hall (Review)

    By Edward / 30/01/2013

    Period instruments demand absolute honesty from their players. Their sound is their personality – candid, quirky, eccentrically beautiful – but their soul is revealed in the spirit of the playing where beauty is not skin deep and…

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  • Classical Music,  Reviews

    London Philharmonic Orchestra, Elder, Royal Festival Hall (Review)

    By Edward / 24/01/2013

    The natural logic of this heady mix of first and second Viennese utterances was turned on its head with Webern’s early tone poem Im Sommerwind opening like a breathy premonition of the autumnal second song of Mahler’s…

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  • Classical Music,  Reviews

    London Philharmonic Orchestra, Mattila, Hampson, Jurowski, Royal Festival Hall (Review)

    By Edward / 20/01/2013

    A single bottom C sunk deeper than even the deepest underground trains running so audibly below the Royal Festival Hall was the auspicious start to the South Bank Centre’s much anticipated festival “The Rest is Noise”. Forget…

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  • Classical Music,  Reviews

    London Symphony Orchestra, Upshaw, Adams, Barbican Hall (Review)

    By Edward / 18/01/2013

    You learn a lot about a composer from the pieces they revere – and for John Adams what might have seemed like an unlikely opening gambit to kick-start this short stack of three concerts with the London…

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  • Classical Music,  Opera,  Reviews

    Wagner “Der fliegende Holländer”, Zurich Opera, Royal Festival Hall

    By Edward / 16/12/2012

    Why anyone these days would want to perform Wagner’s Der fliegende Holländer with an interval when even the three act version was so plainly fashioned to be performed without one is beyond me. There is that tell-tale…

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  • Classical Music,  Reviews

    Renée Fleming, Barbican Hall (Review)

    By Edward / 10/12/2012

    Building a memorable solo recital is an art in itself – that we know – but personalising it so precisely to your vocal character that it’s hard to imagine other voices even contemplating such a programme, now…

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  • Classical Music,  Reviews

    Lehar “The Merry Widow”, Philharmonia Orchestra, Wilson, Royal Festival Hall (Review)

    By Edward / 03/12/2012

    Lehar’s Merry Widow has been been spreading enchantment across the globe for well over a century. She’s the vintage champagne of operettas and the prospect of John Wilson popping her cork was more than a little enticing.…

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  • Classical Music,  Reviews

    London Symphony Orchestra, Gardiner, Barbican Hall (Review)

    By Edward / 30/11/2012

    Any young composer who finds himself at the opposite end of a programme from Walton’s First Symphony had better be good. Edward Nesbit – whose piece Parallels was commissioned by the LSO Panufnik Young Composer’s Scheme –…

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  • Classical Music,  Reviews

    Britten Sinfonia, Alice Coote, Wigmore Hall

    By Edward / 23/11/2012

    The Britten Centenary began here, on his 99th birthday, on Saint Cecilia Day, at Wigmore Hall, and it seemed only fitting that the composer who gave him so much inspiration should have the first word – or…

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  • Classical Music,  Reviews

    London Philharmonic Orchestra, Tetzlaff, Vänskä, Royal Festival Hall (Review)

    By Edward / 01/11/2012

    Some symphonies are natural curtain-raisers: Sibelius’ Third is one. Music began with rhythm and in this piece the cellos are the distant drummers who bring us back to basics with their curt opening measures. Osmo Vänskä clipped…

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Recent Posts

  • GRAMOPHONE Review: Prokofiev Romeo and Juliet – Los Angeles Philharmonic/Dudamel
  • Desmonda Cathabel & Dylan Wood: Doomed Lovers Duets + ‘Comparing Notes’ post show interview with Edward Seckerson
  • SOME OTHER TIME: Leonard Bernstein – In Words & Music with Kim Criswell and Edward Seckerson
  • MARTI WEBB in Conversation with EWdward Seckerson – Newbury Spring Festival
  • GRAMOPHONE Review: Mahler Symphony No. 7 – Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich/Järvi

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