Latest news with #RoyalNorthernSinfonia


BBC News
28-05-2025
- Entertainment
- BBC News
Jade to headline BBC Proms' return to Gateshead at Glasshouse
Pop star Jade has been announced as one of the headline acts when the BBC Proms returns to Gateshead this South Shields-born singer, who found fame as part of Little Mix, will be at the Glasshouse International Centre for Music on Friday 25 been named Best Pop Act at this year's Brit Awards, the 32-year-old will be performing songs from her upcoming solo album alongside the Royal Northern Sinfonia with the concert broadcast live on BBC costing between £8 and £62.50 will go on sale at midday with organisers describing it as "a proper homecoming moment". The Proms event will run until Sunday 27 July with the Glasshouse line-up also featuring singer-songwriter Angeline Morrison, guitarist Sean Shibe and a CBeebies Wildlife Jamboree. The Glasshouse said the Proms would be "a weekend of world-class music" featuring "classical heavyweights to joyful family concerts, late-night jazz to inspiring folk and ground-breaking collaborations".Jazz saxophonist, hip-hop artist, curator and presenter Soweto Kinch will get the Proms under way as it visits Sunderland for the first will be performing at the city's Fire Station arts venue on Thursday 24 July. Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.


Times
23-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Times
Stankiewicz/Crowe review — dazzled by this five-star all-baroque evening
★★★★★ A top-level orchestra is so much greater than the sum of its parts that one often forgets that its parts — the individual players — are pretty sensational by themselves. This glorious, packed-out concert at the Wigmore Hall was a reminder. The main box-office draw was probably the soprano Lucy Crowe, and in an all-baroque programme she certainly wasn't outshone. She delivered a series of testing Bach and Handel arias with such grace, agility, theatricality and wit that the notes seemed to leap off the page, and across the centuries, as though the ink were still wet. In the Handel numbers she was required to be a raging sorceress, goaded to dastardly threats by a fanfaring trumpet, or a cooing bird, fluttering delicately above the stave, or a tempestuous lover. Bach, of course, required a more chaste parade of personae: a joyous bride and a soul searching for Christ. Whatever the character, Crowe made it utterly gripping within seconds. Yet her performance was less than half the story of this concert. Next to her, and frequently matching her for razzle, dazzle and endlessly inventive trills and ornaments, was Olivier Stankiewicz, released from duty as the principal oboist of the London Symphony Orchestra and seemingly determined to cram as many prestissimo semiquavers as possible into his night of freedom. And alongside him were 11 fellow instrumentalists, also drawn from many distinguished ensembles and clearly revelling in this exuberant feast of 18th-century chamber music. Prime among them was the Polish violinist Maria Wloszczowska, usually to be found leading the Royal Northern Sinfonia in Gateshead. She was a spirited and imaginative foil for Stankiewicz in the Bach Double Concerto for oboe and violin. She also established a wild, rustic atmosphere in a Vivaldi Oboe Concerto that was twisted this way and that in mood and tempo, and all the more exhilarating for it.