Magnificat 3: The Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge

For over five centuries, the service of evensong has inspired countless musical settings of the evening canticles.  Its continuing development from composers working within the Anglican tradition (and without) shows…

Hamlet at the Opéra Bastille

Versions of Shakespeare’s famed Hamlet have amused Parisian audiences for  250 years or so, though just now at the Opéra Bastille we were as amused as we were confused. Polish stage…

Jonathan Dove’s Mansfield Park at the Royal Northern College of Music

Jonathan Dove’s orchestral adaptation of his 2011 opera Mansfield Park (originally written for soloists and piano duet) debuted at The Grange Festival in 2017.  With its cast of youthful characters, and…

Paavo Järvi’s Mahler Third: a fabulous and treasurable performance

In the wrong performance Mahler’s Third Symphony can be a burden on the listener and I have very often found this the most difficult of his symphonies to bring off…

Verdi’s Requiem at the Royal Festival Hall with Hackney Singers and Lewisham Choral Society

300 singers from Hackney Singers and Lewisham Choral Society join forces with world-class orchestra London Mozart Players, and a cohort of outstanding professional soloists to perform one of the most…

Korngold’s The Dead City at English National Opera

When he published his novel Bruges-la-Morte, in French, in 1892, the symbolist author George Rodenbach included within the narrative dozens of black-and-white topographical photographs of the Belgian city, largely images…

Opera Rara announces 2023/24 season, including a major multi-year project to perform and record almost 200 rarely heard Donizetti songs

Opera Rara continues the rich vein of operatic archaeology, which has been its calling card for over half a century, with performances, studio recordings and exhibitions in a 2023/24 season…

A lovely, lucid Figaro at the Royal Academy of Music

La folle journée is the title of the second play in Pierre Beaumarchais’s ‘Figaro trilogy’ and, duly, the single ‘mad day’ on which the wedding of Figaro and Susanna takes…

Handel’s Scipione: the Early Opera Company close the London Handel Festival with a celebration of clemency

This year’s London Handel Festival was brought to a gracious close with a celebration of clemency, magnanimity and honour.  Scipione, the ninth of the operas that Handel composed for the…

Myths and monsters from the BBCSO and Brabbins at the Barbican Hall

Beowulf is an archetypal heroic text of the medieval age: warriors and kings, the sea and craggy cliffs, monsters and myths: the bright gleam of the hero’s ceremonial armour juxtaposed…