logo
BBCNOW/Bancroft/Grosvenor review – from the brilliantly bonkers to heavyweight Shostakovich

BBCNOW/Bancroft/Grosvenor review – from the brilliantly bonkers to heavyweight Shostakovich

The Guardian2 days ago
The BBC National Orchestra of Wales's second Royal Albert Hall date this summer opened with the kind of thing UK audiences only really hear at the Proms: Sofia Gubaidulina's Revue Music for Symphony Orchestra and Jazz Band, written in 1976. It's not what you'd have expected from this serious, intense, spiritually driven composer, who died earlier this year – or, to be honest, from any other composer.
It opens in atmospheric, modern-classical style, ominous bells against high, tense strings. Then it explodes into funky bass guitar and brass, driving drum kit and the Star Trek-like ahhing of a close-miked vocal trio – here it was Synergy Vocals – and it's as if the stage has been taken over by Magnum PI. Gubaidulina pits these two musics against each other, with the jazz-funk periodically dissolving into snatches of Mahlerian melody and translucent orchestral stillness – at one point a few lines of poetry are spoken on top, amid an aura of whispers from the orchestral players. Finally, there's a slow splurge of Bond theme-ish excess – brilliantly bonkers, and the Albert Hall loved it.
A quick recalibration of the ears was required for Ravel's G major Piano Concerto, Benjamin Grosvenor the quicksilver soloist. His playing brought out the bluesiness of Ravel's music, especially in the slow movement, where the tender, meandering melody sounded a split-second out from the accompaniment, as if it were being delivered by a singer perched on a stool in a jazz club. Every note was clear, even as the conductor Ryan Bancroft romped through ever-faster tempos in the finale – and that also went for Grosvenor's encore, the finale of Prokofiev's Sonata No 7, three glorious minutes of ferocious edge-of-the-seat brilliance.
The second half was less crowd-pleasing, if still powerful. Shostakovich's 1962 Symphony No 13 employs a bass-baritone soloist and men's choir to give voice first to a harrowing response to the Holocaust massacre at Babi Yar near Kyiv and then to four other darkly subversive poems about Russia. Bancroft had the orchestra playing with pointed character, and the men of the BBC National Chorus of Wales delivered line after Russian line excellently, but for all his velvety, cavernous bass tone the Lithuanian soloist Kostas Smoriginas needed more swagger in this huge space. Perhaps the work itself travels less well than Shostakovich's other symphonies; certainly, it was a heavy counterweight to a kaleidoscopic first half.
Listen again on BBC Sounds until 12 October. The Proms continue until 13 September
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Towie's Ricky Rayment left heartbroken as his sister dies just weeks after split from his Corrie star girlfriend
Towie's Ricky Rayment left heartbroken as his sister dies just weeks after split from his Corrie star girlfriend

The Sun

time30 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Towie's Ricky Rayment left heartbroken as his sister dies just weeks after split from his Corrie star girlfriend

TOWIE star Ricky Rayment has revealed his sister has passed away at the age of 56. The 34-year-old paid tribute to popular Essex make-up artist Lisa Kempley after laying her to rest today. 4 Sharing a picture of her funeral programme, Ricky wrote: 'RIP my beautiful sister. You got the send off you deserved. Love you forever.' Lisa's death was announced earlier this month, with a statement that read: 'We are saddened to announce that our lovely Lisa passed away on Friday 25th July. 'We know she was truly loved by friends and clients alike and therefore want to extend an open invitation to attend her funeral service. 'Irreplaceable wife, mum, sister, daughter, friend and eyebrow queen." A number of famous faces rushed to share their condolences, with Chloe Lewis commenting: 'So sorry to hear this news, she's was such a beautiful lady. Life is just so unfair sometimes, sending all my love to her beautiful family.' Another former Towie star, Fran Parman remarked: 'Sending you all so much love. Lisa was just the brightest soul in the room. Beautiful lady inside and out. Thinking of you all. Xxxx' While Jess Wright, who previously dated Ricky, wrote: 'I'm so so sorry, sending so much love.' Katie McGlynn, who he started dating in 2023 after meeting on a cruise ship. Despite sparking engagement rumours earlier this year, last month the pair deleted all pictures of each other from their social media accounts. Coronation Street's Katie McGlynn SPLITS with Towie star boyfriend after two years of dating "Katie and Ricky have ended their romance, they're still friends and want to remain civil but in terms of a romantic relationship, it's definitely over," a source told the MailOnline. They added that they found it "difficult" to maintain a long distance relationship, with Katie in Manchester and Ricky in Essex. 4

The 'amazing' way Kate Middleton' shows up for her children revealed by fellow school mom
The 'amazing' way Kate Middleton' shows up for her children revealed by fellow school mom

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

The 'amazing' way Kate Middleton' shows up for her children revealed by fellow school mom

She may be a royal, but Kate Middleton is like any other mom when it comes to her kids' sporting events. Despite her busy schedule, one of Kate's fellow school moms has revealed that she is often cheering her son on at his school soccer and rugby matches. The Real Housewives of London star Panthea Parker spoke about it to Hello! Magazine during a recent interview. 'I see her quite a few times because my son's school plays against her son's school,' the TV star shared. 'They play rugby and football against each other so we're always at her school or my school. I do see her a lot but not to talk to, just from afar.' Panthea went on to praise the Princess of Wales for being there to support her kids while also managing her immense royal commitments. '[She's] so classy, so lovely, and she never misses any of her children's matches, so really amazing,' she gushed. 'And nor do I, otherwise how do I know that?' Panthea has three kids with her husband, Ed Parker, aged 11, nine, and eight; she also has a son, 30, from a past marriage. She didn't specify which of Kate and Prince William's kids she was referring to; the couple share sons Prince George, 12, and Prince Louis, seven, and daughter Princess Charlotte, 10. It comes after news hit the web that the couple were looking to move their family from Adelaide Cottage into an eight-bedroom Forest Lodge property in Windsor Great Park. An insider told the BBC that they will be relocating to the 'forever home' by the end of the year, and are hoping for a 'fresh start' after a difficult time at Adelaide Cottage, during which Queen Elizabeth died and Kate and Charles received cancer diagnoses. With its chandelier-lit ballroom, tennis court and extensive grounds, Forest Lodge is a considerable upgrade from the cozy four-bedroom Adelaide Cottage where the prince and princess and their young family have lived for the last three years. Renovations are reportedly underway at the property to enable it to be ready for the family to move in before the end of the year. A source close to the family said: 'Windsor has become their home. However, over the last few years while they have lived at Adelaide Cottage there have been some really difficult times. 'Moving gives them an opportunity for a fresh start and a new chapter; an opportunity to leave some of the more unhappy memories behind.' The Waleses' move will be a short one from their current main home at Adelaide Cottage in Windsor, and the children attend nearby Lambrook School. It comes after news hit the web that the couple were looking to move their family from Adelaide Cottage into an eight-bedroom Forest Lodge property in Windsor Great Park (pictured) The home offers spectacular views, and Soccer fan William will be able to see the Wembley Arch from his bedroom window. The family first moved to Windsor in 2022, where they settled at the humble Adelaide Cottage a short walk away. It is believed the move out of London was to allow the family to be closer to the late Queen and to give the children a more ordinary way of life with more privacy. Adelaide Cottage also provided a private and tranquil setting for Kate's recovery from chemotherapy after she was diagnosed with cancer last year. The family has no live-in staff at their current home and this is also reportedly set to be the case once they move into this bigger abode. A Kensington Palace spokesperson told the Daily Mail: 'The Wales family will move house later this year.'

Ivo Graham: Orange Crush review – comic riffs on his favourite colour, from Irn-Bru to Wotsits
Ivo Graham: Orange Crush review – comic riffs on his favourite colour, from Irn-Bru to Wotsits

The Guardian

time30 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Ivo Graham: Orange Crush review – comic riffs on his favourite colour, from Irn-Bru to Wotsits

With Orange Crush, Ivo Graham promises us either his best ever standup set, or a colour-coordinated breakdown. I'm not sure it's either. Having been asked 'What's your favourite colour?' by his six-year-old kid, this show riffs on Graham's fondness for orange – which doesn't exactly scream standup with something essential to say. But he roams around the subject entertainingly enough, in an hour addressing Wotsits and Irn-Bru, his mother's MS and his role in the campaign to save Swindon Town football club. Alongside that material, Graham is bracingly outspoken on Palestine, to which cause he also lends his support. All of which, with his newfound suavity and recent rebranding (tongue in cheek or otherwise) as simply 'Ivo', made me wonder: whither the shy and self-abasing Graham of yesteryear? It mightn't have been much fun to live, but it was a compelling comic persona – whereas Ivo 2.0, 34 years old and with a bit of swagger, is harder to grasp. Not that he's grown out of awkwardness. The stories here loop around reveals of Graham's favourite orange things ('It's time to lift the first cloche of the evening …'), and the first finds him banging into an old flame while riding a particularly manky Lime bike. In another, his plan is thwarted to pester Nick Hornby at a VIP dinner. There are one or two clunky audience interactions, too, that our host frets about more than is necessary. On the flipside, a cocky visual gag offsets any Orange Order anxieties among the Scottish crowd; and then there's his 'I'm the top Ivo' material, comparing himself to his humbler namesakes. One such is the rapper Drake (full name: Aubrey Drake Graham), and the comic knows well how funny it is for a posh Englishman to implicate himself in hip-hop 'diss tracks'. His Eton background gives us the show's funniest gag, too, about a careers fair at his former school. Much of what remains prompts smiles rather than belly laughs, with his tale of filming a video for his save Swindon campaign in particular feeling too many steps removed from the stage. It's not a career best, but there are flashes in this chromatically themed outing of Graham in glorious Technicolor. At Pleasance Courtyard, Edinburgh, until 24 August All our Edinburgh festival reviews

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store