7 January 1907: This week, by cosmic or other coincidence, has the birthdays of four composers who wrote some of the most interesting 20th-century music for the piano. Francis Poulenc here plays his Piano Concerto for Two Pianos with Jacques Fevrier.
7 January 1907: This week, by cosmic or other coincidence, has the birthdays of four composers who wrote some of the most interesting 20th-century music for the piano. Francis Poulenc here plays his Piano Concerto for Two Pianos with Jacques Fevrier.
theartsdesk received a New Year's gift last night when we were given a significant accolade from BBC Radio 5 Live. In Web 2009 with Helen and Olly, the station's podcasters and self-styled "internet obsessives" Helen Zaltzman and Olly Mann recognised theartsdesk as one of the five "essential sites of 2009" in a series of awards to the "cream of weblebrity".
The morning after the day before has dawned. If you're not inclined to join the shopping queues, theartsdesk is happy to suggest alternatives. Our writers recommend all sorts of cultural things you could get up to in the next week.
As we all have only one shopping day left, theartsdesk hopes to make Christmas Eve a little easier by offering a few enlightened recommendations. From our writers on new and classical music, opera and ballet, film and comedy, here is a list of CDs and DVDs that we hope will enhance your 11th-hour shopping experience. Happy Christmas from all at theartsdesk.
DVDs
A continuing series celebrating musicians' birthdays.
16 December 1899: Noel Coward, sharing a birthday with Beethoven, an early English rapper of the silk polka dot dressing gown and cigarette holder school.
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This week the BBC News online magazine is running a Portrait of the Decade. Each day has brought a consideration of the words, the events, the people, the objects and, today, the cultural highlights of the decade. I was invited to consider those highlights.
An ongoing series celebrating musicians' birthdays.
2 December 1982: Britney Spears is 27. There is some resistance to Britney hereabouts, so I thought I'd post a version of "Toxic" sung acoustically by Galia Arad to demonstrate that she does have some terrific songs. If Galia - who with her cousin Lail, should become much better known in 2010 - loves Britney, who are we less cool mortals to resist her?
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22 November 1965: Bjørk released her first self-titled album at the age of 11, at 14 she was in a punk band called Spit and Snot, and has since gone on to be one of the most successful and original musicians on the planet. Many of her classic videos have had their sound removed on YouTube, but "All is Full of Love" directed by Chris Cunningham is up there still, and features the best lesbian robot love scene ever filmed.
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The term "Awards Ceremony" can strike terror into the stoutest of hearts, but hats off to the masterminds of the 2009 Classic FM Gramophone awards. Their shindig at the Dorchester was enjoyable, educational, and even intermittently hilarious (and for the right reasons).
Mathieu Herzog, viola player with France's Quatuor Ebène who carried off the lusted-after Recording Of The Year award for their disc of Debussy, Ravel and Fauré, even ran Antoine "Eurotrash" de Caunes close as the Frenchman the Brits love to love. Having tried, and failed, to phone his French amis back home to share the moment ("no signal," he shrugged), he took photos of the audience instead, before warning us that since the Quatuor's next disc would be pop and jazz, it might be years before Gramophone critics gave his combo the nod a second time.
Refreshingly lacking in the glittery crossover celebs who drape themselves over the Classical Brits, the event packed in nutritious quantities of classical bang-per-buck. Octogenarian Austrian conductor Nikolaus Harnoncourt made a worthy recipient of the Lifetime Achievement award, speed-fingered 22-year-old pianist Yuja Wang collected Young Artist of the Year, and the Artist of the Year paperweight went to the very lovely Harry Christophers and his ensemble The Sixteen.
Solo Vocal award was scooped by baritone Gerald Finley (an ex-member of The Sixteen, as he reminded us) and pianist Julius Drake, while Bryn Terfel (pictured right) loomed onto the stage to collect the Choral gong on behalf of the Dream of Gerontius recording by the Hallé Orchestra under conductor Sir Mark Elder.
Steven Osborne cheerily trousered the Concerto award for his Britten Piano Concerto, then amazed the house by springing to the piano and rocketing through Oscar Peterson's scarily rapid (Back Home Again In) Indiana, skilfully managing not to sound like a classical pianist at all. Assorted live performances, from The Sixteen singing plainsong to slightly bonkers contemporary music, were sprinkled refreshingly throughout the proceedings.
Outside it’s snowing in the pale and spectral city of St Petersburg. Inside it’s 4.30 am and we’ve been drinking for several hours in a restaurant next to the Mariinsky Theatre when Valery Gergiev, for many the world’s greatest conductor and with a reputation as a wild man, suggests now would be the best time for an interview with him.