Wednesday, 19 November 2025

Giltburg and Foster celebrate the Philharmonia’s 80th birthday with a punchy piano-fest

Philharmonia Orchestra
© Luca Migliore

Lawrence Foster (conductor)

7.30pm, Monday 17 November 2025







Mussorgsky, Modest (1839-1881): A Night on the Bare Mountain (arr. Rimsky-Korsakov, Nikolai (1844-1908))
Prokofiev, Sergei (1891-1953): Piano Concerto No. 3 in C major, Op. 26
Rachmaninov, Sergei (1873-1943): The Rock, Op. 7
                                                         Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18
Kreisler, Friedrich (1875-1962) : Alt-Wiener Tanzweizen, No. 2 Liebesleid (transcribed by Rachmaninov, Sergei)

Mussorgsky:
'(Foster) conducted with assurance and authority, and his beat was crystal clear, eliciting tight martial brass and effortlessly judged acceleration from the bassoons'.

Rachmaninov, The Rock:
'Foster ensured that all the expressive detail came to the fore here, before ratcheting up the passion for the climax'.

Prokofiev:
'Giltburg’s Prokofiev was more expressive than many readings, but without overt showy movements and a steely focus on the virtuosic detail, as well as effortlessly understated lyricism in the opening movement'. 

Rachmaninov:
'Together with Giltburg, Foster and the orchestra brought out Rachmaninov’s often underestimated orchestral writing'

Encore:
Giltburg still had something left to give, with an enchanting rendition of Rachmaninov’s arrangement of Kreisler’s Liebesleid to finish the night, much to the delight of the almost sold-out Royal Festival Hall crowd.

Read my full review on Bachtrack here.

Monday, 10 November 2025

The Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra strings excel, with expressive Britten from Padmore & Watkins, and exciting MacMillan from MacGregor

Joanna MacGregor & the BPO strings
© Frances Marshall

Mark Padmore (tenor)
Joanna MacGregor (piano/conductor)
Ruth Rogers (leader)

7.30pm, Saturday 8 November 2025







Ruth Rogers leading the BPO strings
© Frances Marshall

Britten, Benjamin (1913-1976): Young Apollo, Op. 16
Purcell, Henry (1659-1695): Chacony in G minor Z.730, (arr. Britten, Benjamin)
Britten, Benjamin: Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings, Op. 31
Dowland, John (1563-1626): Mr Dowland's Midnight (arr. MacGregor, Joanna (b.1959))
MacMillan, James (b.1959): Piano Concerto No. 2


The Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra continued their successful season with a programme that allowed their string section to shine, and shine they did. With some of the richest string playing I’ve heard from them, they relished the warm Corn Exchange acoustic, and also showed their tight ensemble in some of the more complex rhythmic music this evening. And what a great programme, with the music of three English composers – Britten, Purcell and Downland – joining the great Scottish composer, James MacMillan.

 

So they began with Britten’s Young Apollo, with Music Director Joanna MacGregor at the keyboard. It’s a vibrant, energetic piece, composed in 1939 when the 26-year-old Britten was in New York, yet he withdrew it soon after its premiere, without saying why, and it wasn’t performed again until 1979, after his death. It’s hard to know why, as its bright, radiant energy certainly captures images of ‘the new dazzling Sun-god’, as Britten described Apollo, inspired by Keats’ Hyperion. MacGregor launched in with an incisive start, and the glassy string slides and scales against the virtuosic piano scales were full of vitality. The vibrant solo string quartet contrasted well with the full, luscious string sound, and the ensemble of the accelerating chords at the finish was spot on. 

 

Mark Padmore, Alexei Watkins and the BPO
© Frances Marshal

Next up the strings were left to their own devices, with leader Ruth Rogers directing from the front desk in Britten’s arrangement of Purcell’s Chacony. Here their lush sound came to the fore, but also their ability to keep their precision alive when playing quietly. Just when the repeated variations that form the chaconne felt like they were becoming borderline aggressive, they dropped back to produce a more sensitive, quieter sound, and the slowing up of the quiet ending was well timed.

 

They were then joined by their Principal Horn player, Alexei Watkins and tenor Mark Padmore for Britten’s masterpiece, the Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings. A cycle of eight short songs setting varied texts including Tennyson, Blake and Keats, it is bookended by a Prologue and Epilogue for the solo horn. Watkins’ opening Prologue, which exploits hand-stopping to produce natural, other-worldly harmonics, was secure and controlled, with an earthy rasp to the sound in places, and the off-stage Epilogue at the end was atmospherically eery. Padmore’s expressive communication of the texts was faultless, so no need to consult the texts in the programme here. His tone was equally expressive, with moments of tender fragility , such as in Pastoral, as well as evocative word-painting, as in Nocturne’s repeated ‘dying’, and the playfully decorative ‘excellently’ in Hymn to Diana. Occasionally, expressive projection was favoured over centring of intonation, such as on the repeated ‘lulling’ or at the highest end of the range, but communication of the dark moods and evocative texts had undeniable clarity throughout. Watkins’ fanfares in Nocturne, and shifts in and out of mute in the mournful Elegy were impressive, and he demonstrated considerable power in Dirge. MacGregor directed the strings with clarity and energy, with a gleaming, glassy sound in Nocturne, and strong articulation in Dirge

 

Joanna MacGregor’s arrangements of three short Dowland pieces provided a delightful opening to the concert’s second half, with solo violins and viola joining the double bass and cello pizzicato line in Forlorn Hope Fancy, soon to be joined by running lines from the piano, the arrangement cleverly building to a richly textured conclusion. In Mr Dowland’s Midnight, MacGregor uses the pizzicato double basses again, this time layered with jazzy piano chords and then string surges. A muted quartet of two cellos, viola and violin features, with noodling from the piano on top. The final Can She Excuse for strings alone provided a lively rhythmic contrast to end the set. 

 

Joanna MacGregor (snare drum and piano)
© Frances Marshall

James McMillan’s Piano Concerto No. 2, which ended the evening’s concert, was a revelation to me, an exciting piece full of humour and playfulness but also complexity and diversity of moods. There’s the McMillan trademark use of Scottish tunes, and the Ceilidh that always seems to go off the rails. When MacGregor has conducted the full orchestra from the piano in the past, it hasn’t always proved totally successful, particularly in larger scale concerto works. However, here, the smaller forces of just strings needed less controlling, especially with Rogers’ strong leadership. Joanna still managed some left hand conducting whilst playing the solo part in the right hand, however, and everything felt extremely tight and energetic throughout. The opening movement, Cumnock Fair, is full of cartoon-like, playful renditions of various 18th century tunes, and there is plenty of opportunity for the strings to have fun. At one point, the violins’ drunken melody gets louder and slightly out of hand, and the BPO violins judged and controlled this well. Melodies collided as the piano tried to pick out the quote of music from Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor’s famous Mad Scene, which repeatedly went off the rails (in a good, Ravel’s La Valse kind of way), before the sliding strings came over all atmospherically Celtic. As the chaos develops into full on Ceilidh in the final movement, there was enthusiastic foot stamping and whoops from the players, with slaps and slides, and the solo piano ringing out on top. Joanna even switched to beating rhythm on the snare drum before sliding down into the depths of the keyboard, and then still trying to assert the Lucia music. Rising piano flourishes built with a stomping string reel, bringing everything to a sudden raucous conclusion. 

 

Once again, MacGregor’s lively and imaginative programming, as well as insightful direction throughout, allowed the BPO players to rise to new heights. And great to see the Corn Exchange pretty much sold out for this.  

Tuesday, 4 November 2025

Gothic Opera allows another side of Offenbach to shine at Battersea Arts Centre

Die Rheinnixen
© Craig Fuller
Max Hoehn (director)
Hannah von Wiehler (conductor)
Leon Haxby (arranger)
Isabella van Braeckel (set & costume designer)
Luca Panetta (lighting designer)


Mae Heydorn (Hedwig)
Alice Usher (Armgard)
Sam Utley (Franz)
Owain Gwynfryn (Conrad von Wenckhem)
Harrison Gration (Gottfried)
Emily Rooke, Anusha Merrin, Hannah Morley, Cicely-Yishou Hé, Lars Fischer, Alexander White, Maximilian Catalano, Chris Murphy (Chorus)

Alice Usher (Armgard) & Sam Utley (Franz)
© Craig Fuller
5pm, Sunday 2 November 2025


Offenbach, Jacques (1819-1880): Die Rheinnixen
(Edited by Jean-Christophe Keck, Libretto by Charles Nuitter & Alfred von Wolzogen, Arranged by Leon Haxby)

'Gothic Opera chose Die Rhiennixen for their seventh season. Once again, they have pulled off a triumph'.

'The performance gripped from beginning to end, the closeness of the action to the audience creating an immersive experience, a treat to see and hear the singers up so close'.

Owain Gwynfryn (Conrad)
© Craig Fuller
'Alice Usher (co-founder) was spellbinding as Armgard ... whilst Mae Heydorn, as her mother Hedwig, had ... steely power when needed'.

'Sam Utley’s Franz was ... tender and warm, with power at the top of his range. Harrison Gration made the strongest vocal impact of the men,his powerful bass-baritone one to watch ...
 whilst Owain Gwynfryn as Conrad (is) another agile baritone to watch out for'.

'The band ... performed Leon Haxby’s arrangement of the score with tight energy, conducted with precision and clarity by von Wiehler'.

Read my full review on Bachtrack here




Sunday, 2 November 2025

The Railway Children becomes a pacy action thriller in Turnage's hands at Glyndebourne

Jessica Cale (Bobbie), Henna Mun (Phyllis) & Matthew McKinney (Peter)
© Glyndebourne Productions Ltd/Richard Hubert Smith

Tim Anderson (Conductor)
Nicky Shaw (Designer)
Mark Jonathan (Lighting Designer)
Max White (Video Designer)
Lydia Coomes (Sound Designer)


Aidan Oliver (Chorus Director)


Gavan Ring (Mr Perks) & Chorus
© Glyndebourne Productions Ltd/Richard Hubert Smith

Edward Hawkins (David, Mr Tarpolski)
Simon Mascarenhas Carter (Police Officer, Chorus)
John Mackenzie-Lavansch (Detective Sergeant, Train Driver, Chorus)
Rhiain Taylor (Police Radio, Chorus)
Jessica Cale (Bobbie)
Henna Mun (Phyllis)
Michael Wallace (Police Constable, Chorus)
Gavan Ring (Mr Perks)
James Cleverton (Sir Tommy Crawshaw)
Natalia Brzenzińska (Chorus)
Jacquelyn Parker (Chorus)
Rachel Taylor (Chorus)

4pm, Thursday 30 October, 2025

Glyndebourne Opera House, Glyndebourne 


Turnage, Mark-Anthony (b.1960): The Railway Children
(Libretto by Hewer, Rachael)

Jessica Cale (Bobbie) & Ensemble
© Glyndebourne Productions Ltd/Richard Hubert Smith

'
Hewer’s libretto is direct and clear, with switches between narration and dialogue moving the action along with pace. Turnage’s score is tight and equally pacy, with strong use of chamber forces, from single strings to woodwinds and dashes of percussion, the overall style of tense action thriller occasionally giving way to more tender lyricism, all conducted with energetic precision by Tim Anderson'.

'Nicky Shaw’s design is slick and suits the action well, with camera shutter switches between scenes and stylish colour palettes, and Mark Jonathan’s lighting adds further sharpness of focus'.

'Singing from all was faultless, with clear communication, strong depiction of characters and evenness of strength and projection. Jessica Cale was exceptional as the eldest child, Bobbie, ... her bright soprano ... increasing in strength of conviction'.

The Railway Children - full cast
© Glyndebourne Productions Ltd/Richard Hubert Smith

'Matthew McKinney was convincing as Peter, ... carrying Turnage’s angular lines well, and Henna Mun was endearingly sweet as Phyllis'.

'A few confusing elements in the updating of characters and a lack of a convincing train notwithstanding, this is an effective take bringing something fresh to an old favourite, and Turnage’s score is full of action and interest throughout'. 

Read my full review on Backtrack here
Mark-Anthony Turnage, Rachael Hewer, cast & artistic team
© Nick Boston