According to Building.co.uk, the search for a site for the new London concert hall, or "cultural hub" as some are inevitably calling it, is homing in on "the triangle between Moorgate, St Paul's and Farringdon tube stations". The report says that "a road tunnel under the Barbican complex may make way for the venue". The City of London Corporation is said to be keen on "much more intensive use of the area", especially once the Farringdon Crossrail station is ready in 2018.
More info here.
Friday, February 20, 2015
NEW HALL FOR LONDON: IT'S REAL
Or so they say. According to the Evening Standard and some other papers, Chancellor George Osborne is giving his blessing to...a feasibility study to see if there really is a watertight case for a new world-class concert hall in the UK capital. That isn't quite the same thing as saying that London is definitely going to have said hall, but it's got to start somewhere, and apparently the City of London Corporation is now looking for a good site. Here's the latest: http://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/george-osborne-backs-move-for-new-concert-hall-for-london-10056183.html
Just in: a statement from the Barbican:
We've been wanting this for years and years and years and decades and decades. It's a real breakthrough. First of all: thanks, guys.
So...to the reality. What happens now?
One wonders about the timing. If they find a site soon, then by the time all the processes are in place it will probably be time for Rattle to start at the LSO, assuming he is going to start at all, which remains in question. How long does it take to build a world-class concert hall these days, especially in London? Rattle is turning 60 this year. Perhaps this hall, if it materialises, will be ready to open for his 70th birthday.
OK, call me cynical. But there is a pernicious history in this country - and other places, not least France and Spain - of spending a lot of dosh on putting strange buildings in strange places for non-artistic purposes at the expense of the content. You need to invest not only in arts venues, but in art itself.
That means you need to treat performers better. Which means, in turn, that you need not only to provide better pay and conditions for your artistic companies, which you do, but also you need to ensure that all schoolchildren have the chance to learn about the arts and try their hands at them, you need to stop charging the earth for advanced high-level training - for example, you cannot with one hand introduce astronomical tuition fees at specialist colleges and with the other grumble that only rich kids go into acting - and you need to create a culture in which the value of music and arts for all is not constantly sniped at, but instead is accepted as a natural part of a civilised society. Arts, politics and education need to indulge in some joined-up thinking. (Over at The Amati Magazine, our Young Artist of the Week, BBC's Young Musician of the Year 2012 cellist Laura van der Heijden, has some strong words on music education.)
Some commentators have suggested that we don't need a hall and we should simply prioritise our performers instead. I think we need both. In an ideal world, it shouldn't be either or.
Look, it'll be great if it happens. It really will. But please, get it right this time?
Just in: a statement from the Barbican:
Sir Nicholas Kenyon, Managing Director, Barbican and Kathryn McDowell, Managing Director, London Symphony Orchestra said:
“This commitment from the Chancellor to put new money into a feasibility study for a world-class music centre that serves London, Londoners, and the nation as a whole is a hugely exciting prospect.
“Culture is ever more important in defining our great cities, and this is a once-in-a-generation chance to explore how we could work with the City of London to create a state-of-the-art performance and education facility for the digital age that offers outstanding learning opportunities for all.”
We've been wanting this for years and years and years and decades and decades. It's a real breakthrough. First of all: thanks, guys.
So...to the reality. What happens now?
One wonders about the timing. If they find a site soon, then by the time all the processes are in place it will probably be time for Rattle to start at the LSO, assuming he is going to start at all, which remains in question. How long does it take to build a world-class concert hall these days, especially in London? Rattle is turning 60 this year. Perhaps this hall, if it materialises, will be ready to open for his 70th birthday.
OK, call me cynical. But there is a pernicious history in this country - and other places, not least France and Spain - of spending a lot of dosh on putting strange buildings in strange places for non-artistic purposes at the expense of the content. You need to invest not only in arts venues, but in art itself.
That means you need to treat performers better. Which means, in turn, that you need not only to provide better pay and conditions for your artistic companies, which you do, but also you need to ensure that all schoolchildren have the chance to learn about the arts and try their hands at them, you need to stop charging the earth for advanced high-level training - for example, you cannot with one hand introduce astronomical tuition fees at specialist colleges and with the other grumble that only rich kids go into acting - and you need to create a culture in which the value of music and arts for all is not constantly sniped at, but instead is accepted as a natural part of a civilised society. Arts, politics and education need to indulge in some joined-up thinking. (Over at The Amati Magazine, our Young Artist of the Week, BBC's Young Musician of the Year 2012 cellist Laura van der Heijden, has some strong words on music education.)
Some commentators have suggested that we don't need a hall and we should simply prioritise our performers instead. I think we need both. In an ideal world, it shouldn't be either or.
Look, it'll be great if it happens. It really will. But please, get it right this time?
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
OMG. Dancing Moomins?
What could be cuter than turning a Moomin book into a ballet? At Finnish National Opera they are rehearsing a new ballet of Moomin and the Comet, based on the classic children's book by Tove Jansson. Ananadah Kononen is choreographing, music is by Panu Aaltio. The Moomin blog says: "Although the body of the Moomins is not the most flexible for the ballet, the other characters of the Valley will take care of the classical ballet part."
Here are some photos by Sophia Jansson.
The ballet opens on 6 March at the Almi Hall. Those in Helsinki with strong winter constitutions can also see the Moomins dance at the free outdoors Winter Ball, on the National Opera piazza, on 28 February. More info and booking here.
KEVIN O'HARE, please can you bring them over to the Linbury? We love Moomins!
Here are some photos by Sophia Jansson.
The ballet opens on 6 March at the Almi Hall. Those in Helsinki with strong winter constitutions can also see the Moomins dance at the free outdoors Winter Ball, on the National Opera piazza, on 28 February. More info and booking here.
KEVIN O'HARE, please can you bring them over to the Linbury? We love Moomins!
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
An Anglophile violinist celebrates
Philippe Graffin. Photo: Marco Borrgreve |
Hooray for Philippe Graffin, the Anglophile French violinist of London. He has been living here for 20 years and is marking this 0anniversary with three concerts on two days. Tonight at Cadogan Hall he gives the world premiere of Peter Fribbins's new Violin Concerto, written especially for him, with the English Chamber Orchestra conducted by Jean-Jacques Kantorow, and throws in Ravel's Tzigane for good measure.
On Friday he joins forces with musical friends at St John's Smith Square for an evening of two performances: first, at 6.30pm (NB time) - chamber music by Debussy, Elgar and David Matthews with a line-up including Raphael Wallfisch, Roger Chase, David Waterman, Alastair Beatson, Marisa Gupta, Emeline Dessi, Chen Halevi and David Matthews himself (more info here). Then at 9.15pm there's the fabulous Enescu Violin Sonata No.3, two premieres of works written for Philippe, and a collaboration with Tango Factory from Buenos Aires to conclude with some headily gorgeous Piazzolla.
We hope he will stay longer. Here's to the next 20 years.
Here is Philippe with pianist Claire Désert in the Valse Triste by Franz von Vecsey - a 'Hungarian Dances' Concert favourite, from the album he made to go with the novel in 2008...
[UPDATE: post amended 18/2/15 to reflect fact that he's been here 20 years, not 25. Moral: never blog after a good lunch.]
Saturday, February 14, 2015
Rattle's Sibelius...
I went along to the Barbican on Tuesday for the opening night of the Rattle/Berlin Sibelius cycle. My review is for The Independent and should be online there soon. I wanted to post it here before The London Residency comes to its close tomorrow...
*****
Berliner Philharmoniker/Sir Simon Rattle
Barbican, London, 10 January 2015
Jessica Duchen
The Barbican was heaving at the concrete
seams as the Berliner Philharmoniker began its London residency, the promise of
which has been engendering unprecedented heat. Divided between this hall and
the Southbank Centre, it features Sir Simon Rattle at the helm of his German orchestra,
widely termed the best in the world. The expectations of this orchestra are
such that tickets for its Mahler Second Symphony at the weekend are rumoured to
be changing hands for £200 a piece. Meanwhile Rattle’s mooted appointment as
music director of the London Symphony Orchestra is still up in the air.
Opening their complete cycle of symphonies
by Sibelius with the first two, Rattle and the Berliners proved at the peak of
their powers: an orchestra of individual virtuosi playing as one, as if in
supersized chamber music, with Rattle, conducting from memory, leading the way
with an assurance that proved at every turn that the music is part of him and
he of it.
Rattle has a long history with the Sibelius
symphonies – he recorded them back in his years last century with the City of
Birmingham Symphony Orchestra – and his interpretations have grown into
something at once individual and universal. Here the progress of the composer's imaginative sophistication from the first to the second symphonies shone out: No.1,
dating from 1900, aching in the shadow of Tchaikovsky; No.2 moving into new dramatic
territories in which no step is safe, no illusion unquestioned, yet no lament
unanswered by hope.
For some, Rattle’s interpretations might at
first seem too rich, too warm; we imagine Sibelius as rugged and lonely,
shivering through the Finnish winter. But his ability to pace the drama paid
ample dividends: working in long lines and giant paragraphs, generating energy
from small details that gradually rise to take over, striking just the right
balance to cast new light over the precipices, the power of thought is made
palpable with overwhelming intensity.
Above all, though, listening to this
orchestra is an experience of astonishing sensuality, the aural equivalent of,
for example, bathing in asses’ milk laced with rose petals while sipping the
finest vintage Bordeaux and watching the Northern Lights at their most
spectacular, topped by a meteor shower. If you thought an orchestra could not
do that, be advised: it can.
This opulence of tone is the Berliner Philharmoniker’s own, honed long ago under the baton of Herbert von Karajan; Rattle is in some ways åits custodian. But it is clear how much he will be leaving behind in Berlin when he departs, and equally clear what we would be missing if he does not ultimately accept that post with the LSO. Frankly we need Rattle here more than he needs us. If a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity like this is missed, if the UK’s only home-grown great maestro is allowed to slip through our fingers thanks to finance and mealy-mouthed politicians, it would be an act of criminal irresponsibility against the cultural life of the UK.
This opulence of tone is the Berliner Philharmoniker’s own, honed long ago under the baton of Herbert von Karajan; Rattle is in some ways åits custodian. But it is clear how much he will be leaving behind in Berlin when he departs, and equally clear what we would be missing if he does not ultimately accept that post with the LSO. Frankly we need Rattle here more than he needs us. If a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity like this is missed, if the UK’s only home-grown great maestro is allowed to slip through our fingers thanks to finance and mealy-mouthed politicians, it would be an act of criminal irresponsibility against the cultural life of the UK.
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