Reviews

L’Incoronazione di Poppea, Colston Hall Bristol

MUSIC-lovers in the South West have a very special treat this spring, as Dorset resident Sir John Eliot Gardiner gives the UK premiere of his Monteverdi 450 trilogy in Bristol at the start of its international journey. The first concert, in April, was of Il Ritorno D’Ulisse in Patria, and the final offering is L’Orfeo…

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Scheherazade at The Lighthouse

Debussy: Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune Lalo: Symphonie espagnole Rimsky-Korsakov: Scheherazade Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, leader Amyn Merchant James Gaffigan: Conductor Alexandra Soumm: Violin I ONCE asked a member of the BSO if he ever got bored with playing the familiar mainstream pieces of the classical repertoire – pieces like Rimsky-Korsakov’s much-loved suite ‘Scheherazade’.  “What you’ve…

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The Dream of Gerontius, Abbey Festival, Sherborne Abbey

ELGAR’S masterpiece The Dream of Gerontius was the choice for one of the major concerts in this year’s Sherborne Abbey Festival.  Cardinal Newman’s original poem, published in 1865, is a vision of what happens to a man’s soul after death.  Some thirty five years later, Elgar set a shortened version of the poem as an…

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Under Milk Wood, Shaftesbury Arts Centre

“IT’s a privilege to be involved in the production and to be speaking so many of Dylan Thomas’s great lines – although it’s been a real challenge to learn them,” said Elizabeth Woodgate, a newcomer to Shaftesbury Arts Centre stage who was the Second Voice in this powerful production of Thomas’s theatrical masterpiece. You know…

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Mahler 5 at Poole Lighthouse

Weber: Clarinet Concerto No. 1 Mahler: Symphony No. 5 Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, leader Mark Derudder Daniele Rustioni: Conductor Daniel Ottensamer: Clarinet A PACKED Lighthouse audience welcomed two young rising stars of the European classical music scene for their debuts with the BSO in this concert of Weber and Mahler, and after their performances here I’m…

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The Mikado, Bath Theatre Royal

HAVING enjoyed Sasha Regan’s all-male productions of The Pirates of Penzance and H.M.S. Pinafore, I had been looking forward to the premiere of this – her third G and S – since the start of the Easter hols. The show, set in 1950’s England, when life was simple and the staple diet was Enid Blyton, we were…

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Into the Woods, Milborne Port Opera

FIRST things first – this was an outstanding show, with a level of consistent excellence in acting, singing, playing, directing and the design elements that one finds once rarely in any theatre, let alone on the amateur stage.  Milborne Port Opera should be thanked and congratulated. Steven Sondheim’s 1980s musical ‘Into the Woods’ is a fascinating…

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Tartuffe, Shakespeare at the Tobacco Factory, Bristol

MOLIERE’S comedy Tartuffe, a savage satire on the hypocrisy of  France in 1664, has been successfully updated many times over the years – it’s always relevant as are all classic plays. It has been chosen by Andrew Hilton as his final show as artistic director of Shakespeare at the Tobacco Factory, the company he founded…

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Shirley Valentine, Bath Theatre Royal and tour

MANY people will know this play, one of Willy Russell’s most famous works, along with Educating Rita and Blood Brothers, from the film starring Pauline Collins. Collins played the title role in London’s West End when it opened there in 1988, directed by Simon Callow. Two years earlier the Artistic Director of the Liverpool Everyman,…

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