sun 29/01/2012

Updated daily with arts reviews, news & interviews

John Martyn, Three-Year Wake

Graeme Thomson

Exactly three years ago, late in the morning of 29 January, 2009, the news began to circulate that John Martyn had died at the age of 60. I spent the following 24 hours or so...

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theartsdesk in Paris: The Oldest Film Star of All

Ronald Bergan

The news that work is to begin in February on a major renovation of the 122-year-old Eiffel Tower reminds us that no other monument in the world, including the Statue of Liberty,...

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Alexei Sayle, Soho Theatre

Veronica Lee

It has been 16 years since Alexei Sayle last performed as a stand-up, save the very occasional charity gig, so there was a proper sense of occasion at the Soho Theatre when he...

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Soweto Kinch, Kings Place

Peter Quinn

Soweto Kinch's set last night as part of the eXplorations mini-series featured gluttony, envy and a host of other vices. No, not A Life in the Day of an Investment...

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How the Brits Rocked America: Go West, BBC Four

Kieron Tyler

Before The Beatles touched down there in 1964, British pop was barely a concern for America. The first in this three-part series took The Beatles arrival as the year zero for...

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House of Tolerance

Graham Fuller

In his previous films, the French director Bernardo Bonello has demonstrated a non-judgemental affinity for pornographers, prostitutes, and other transgressors. In his latest,...

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Men in Motion, Sadler's Wells Theatre

Ismene Brown

Sergei Polunin’s flight this week from the Royal Ballet just as he rises to the pinnacle made last night's Sadler's Wells...

The House of Bernarda Alba, Almeida Theatre

Matt Wolf

No one can exactly accuse Federico Garcia Lorca's 1936 play of falling into neglect. From Howard Davies's National Theatre...

Classical CDs Weekly: Handel, Rachmaninov, Andy Findon

Graham Rickson

 Handel: Agrippina Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin/René Jacobs (Harmonia Mundi)Handel’s early opera appears in a new...

Shallow Slumber, Soho Theatre

Aleks Sierz

Write what you know, the cliché goes, and in his new drama the playwright Chris Lee draws on his day job as a social worker...

Patience (After Sebald)

Fisun Güner

Diehard Sebaldians may seek to retrace the footsteps that formed the basis of WG Sebald’s meditative masterpiece The Rings...

We'll Take Manhattan, BBC Four

Kieron Tyler

The Beatles’s arrival on US TV screens in February 1964 is usually recognised as the beginning of the British Invasion of...

Manchester Rising: Celebrating the City's Vibrant Club Scene

Joe Muggs

I first heard Zed Bias's Biasonic Hot Sauce – Birth of the Nanocloud last autumn. He may have been one of the key players in...

theartsdesk Q&A: Opera Singer Sir Thomas Allen

Jasper Rees

The landmarks continue to mount for Sir Thomas Allen (b. 1944). Awarded the CBE 22 years ago and knighted a decade later,...

Woody at 100, Celtic Connections, Glasgow

Lisa-Marie Ferla

It would be easy to begin with a reflection on how little the world has changed in the 100 years since the birth of Woody...

Jane McAdam Freud: Lucian Freud My Father, Freud Museum

Fisun Güner

In one small room of the Freud Museum, which was once the home of Sigmund in the last year of his life, are the works Jane...

The Sea Plays, Old Vic Tunnels

Carole Woddis

The Old Vic Tunnels would seem to be the perfect place to set three of Eugene O’Neill’s three earliest plays about the sea,...

Fleisher, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Jurowski, Royal Festival Hall

Alexandra Coghlan

The London Philharmonic’s current festival – Prokofiev: Man of the People? – is all about the question mark. While the...

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DAVID HOCKNEY - A BIGGER PICTURE: The master goes bigger, closer, better at the Royal Academy with new works in oil and iPad

THE MADNESS OF GEORGE III: The madness would be in missing this fine revival of Alan Bennett's history play

LISA DILLON: The RSC's latest Kate explains how she aims to tame the Shrew

PUTIN, RUSSIA AND THE WEST: Authoritative new four-part series ponders the enduring power of Putin

BIG SOCIETY!: Chumbawamba and Phill Jupitus enact The Good Old Days in a beautifully restored music hall in Leeds

BIRDSONG: TV solves the problems of Sebastian Faulks's novel where movies and theatre failed

LIKE CRAZY: Love hurts in Drake Doremus's deeply affecting Sundance Festival favourite

CASIOKIDS: Bouncy Norwegian electropoppers have a winning way with melody

DON GIOVANNI: Plenty of flames, but where is the heat in this lazy revival?

must see

disc of the day

CD: Ringo Starr - Ringo 2012

If The Wombles had made this it would likely raise a smile despite its lame, lazy nostalgic guitar pop. It even goes as far as to include a feeble version of seminal skiffle song "Rock Island Line"....

buzz box

Prometheus Rising

It’s not out until 8 June but fan excitement levels are...

One theatre, five awards

When the London theatre critics gathered to hand out their...

The Swedish Erotica Collection: Alienation, Education and Morality

Although the title of this new DVD box set was a given...

tv

How the Brits Rocked America: Go West, BBC Four

Fun but flawed stroll through British pop's Sixties' invasion of America

We'll Take Manhattan, BBC Four

Exasperating attempt to redefine America’s special relationship with Sixties' Britain

The World Against Apartheid, BBC Four

A five-part history of the road to resistance in South Africa

film

theartsdesk in Paris: The Oldest Film Star of All

As it prepares for a facelift, we celebrate France's most venerable movie star of all

House of Tolerance

An ornate depiction of Belle Epoque brothel life is betrayed by a spasm of misogyny

Patience (After Sebald)

Film tribute to writer WG Sebald is visually evocative but veers towards trite hagiography

classical

Classical CDs Weekly: Handel, Rachmaninov, Andy Findon

An Italian opera, bittersweet late Rachmaninov and a flautist doubling up on baritone sax

Fleisher, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Jurowski, Royal Festival Hall

Prokofiev festival finds showmanship if not soul in the composer's ballet music

Blaumane, Royal College of Music Symphony Orchestra, Jurowski, Royal College of Music

The problem of Prokofiev gamely addressed but never solved

opera

theartsdesk Q&A: Opera Singer Sir Thomas Allen

This week the great lyric baritone celebrates his 40th anniversary role at Covent Garden as Don Alfonso

Don Giovanni, Royal Opera House

No amount of flames can generate heat in this lazy revival

Giulio Cesare in Egitto, Opera North

Neat direction and outstanding singing ensure that Albery's Handel succeeds

new music

CD: Ringo Starr - Ringo 2012

The latest from Beatles' drummer is a lame duck walk

Soweto Kinch, Kings Place

A jazz/hip-hop version of the Seven Deadly Sins? With dance? Paging Soweto Kinch

How the Brits Rocked America: Go West, BBC Four

Fun but flawed stroll through British pop's Sixties' invasion of America

theatre

The House of Bernarda Alba, Almeida Theatre

Shohreh Aghdashloo moves "House" in onetime Oscar nominee's UK stage debut

Shallow Slumber, Soho Theatre

Chris Lee’s play about a child murder is brilliantly acted but under-explained

The Sea Plays, Old Vic Tunnels

O'Neill's seafaring trilogy is given the immersive treatment

visual arts

Jane McAdam Freud: Lucian Freud My Father, Freud Museum

Daughter's portrayal of her father during his last few months produces powerful and tender work

Photo Gallery: Top Deck

Images from the top of East London double deckers

theartsdesk Debate: But What Does It Mean? + Can Art Still Shock?

Our art critic Fisun Güner chairs a debate on art's shock value and purpose at the London Art Fair

comedy

Alexei Sayle, Soho Theatre

Alternative comedy's greatest makes a very welcome return to stand-up as an MC

The One Griff Rhys Jones, BBC One

Sketchy return to light entertainment by a comedian better known for cagoule work

Simon Munnery, Soho Theatre

Surreal and experimental show from Urban Warrior's creator

dance

Men in Motion, Sadler's Wells Theatre

Men in emotion a more apt title as Royal Ballet star escapee takes his first steps off the leash

Door left ajar for Royal Ballet star who quit

Covent Garden remains supportive over sudden resignation of Sergei Polunin, superstar in the making

Draft Works, Royal Ballet, Linbury Studio

What's new, what's hot? From dancing cowboys to neoclassical beauty in one easy leap

latest comments

flagyl 8-O topamax tovems

What is the last track of Ep.4? The track goes from the very last scene to over the credits. Some of the lyrics are 'Tear this...

It's really exciting to get a new album from Leonard Cohen. I also love that other artists are covering his songs...Cold War Kids...

So, on the basis of this exquisitely written review and the comments thus far, we can glean the following: while the film is a...

You're right. But there is a hallowed Russian tradition of sudden unforeseen non-shows of billed artists - as Les Ballets...

Really, one of the most coherent and informative reviews of any performing art— that I've ever read. This whole Putrov/Polunin...

Dear Ismene, Could you please explain your stereotypical phrase "the hallowed Russian tradition"? It seems you are not aware of...

Do these dancers not have contracts?