GRAMOPHONE Review: Lloyd Webber Cinderella – Original London Cast
Tale as old as time… but clearly with half an eye on the Instagram age. Hearing this concept album before actually seeing Andrew Lloyd Webber’s latest West End opus (and remember that’s how both Jesus Christ Superstar…
GRAMOPHONE: From Where I Sit – Awards Issue 2021
Richard Bratby’s affectionate tribute to glorious Malcolm Arnold on the 100th anniversary of his birth (September issue) has prompted a few reflections of my own. Not least among them was the weekend I included the slow movement…
GRAMOPHONE Review: Andrew Lloyd Webber Symphonic Suites – The Andrew Lloyd Webber Orchestra/Lee
The Symphonic Suite has quite a pedigree, from those seeking to bask in the drama and hit tunes of favourite operas without words or voices (conductor Carlo Rizzi has been doing so with Puccini, I gather) to…
GRAMOPHONE: From Where I Sit – October 2021
As I contemplate the return of public events and the unimaginable joy of hearing a real orchestra live for the first time in 18 months – that would be at the Proms, I fancy – I am…
GRAMOPHONE Review: Barber A Hand of Bridge, Knoxville: Summer of 1915, Medea – Soloists, Boston Modern Orchestra Project/Rose
A monodrama, a ballet and a mini-opera. Three faces of Samuel Barber ‘in camera’. One might expect a unique offering from a source committed to that cause – namely the Boston Modern Orchestra Project – but I…
GRAMOPHONE: From Where I Sit – September 2021
Re-hearing Andris Nelsons’ splendid account of Shostakovich’s Fifteenth Symphony has left me as ever haunted by the skeletal ‘ticking’ of side drum, castanet and woodblock in the final moments of this the composer’s last symphonic utterance. Of…
GRAMOPHONE Review: Sibelius / Josephson Violin Concertos Fenella Humphreys BBC NOW/Vass
Fenella Humphreys wears her virtuosity lightly. She’s one of those very ‘contained’ players whose musicality looks you straight in the eye but never ever draws attention to itself. The inner-tension is palpable tracing out the first subject…
GRAMOPHONE Review: Shostakovich Symphonies 1, 14, & 15 Boston Symphony Orchestra/Nelsons
Shostakovich’s first and last symphonies make for intriguing bedfellows: the beginning and end of a tortuous journey, heavy with irony and an all-pervasive sense of doubt and desolation. And yet there is always, one feels, a ‘last…
GRAMOPHONE Review: Mahler Symphony No. 7 Bayerisches Staatsorchester/Petrenko
I really thought I knew this work – every facet of it. But Kirill Petrenko has a way of hearing deep into textures and harmonies that is at times really quite startling. He gives us x-ray ears.…
GRAMOPHONE: From Where I Sit – August 2021
During the period when I was Chief Classical Music and Opera critic of The Independent newspaper one thing was always sure to spike my blood pressure: interval banter. Of phrases most commonly overheard at the opera the…