Summer Music in City Churches 2026: Around The World

adapted by Ben Hogwood from the press release

Summer Music in City Churches is a festival in the City of London. Founded in 2018, it presents beautiful music to engage, divert and inspire, in ancient and architecturally stunning churches in the Square Mile. Standing cheek by jowl with City offices, these churches are glorious settings in which to listen and reflect: oases of history, beauty and peace amidst the 24-7 hurly-burly of City life.

For its 2026 edition, the festival takes flight over its home in the City to travel Around the World. You can experience it in the Square Mile’s beautiful historic churches for nine days full of music inspired by landscapes and traditions of town and country, at home and abroad.

A quick tour: For an opening concert conjuring warm nights in southern Europe, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra are joined by talented young guitarist Jack Hancher as soloist in Rodrigo‘s much-loved Concierto de Aranjuez, with Rossini and Ravel in Spanish mood, plus Mendelssohn in sunny Italy.

In a limited offer, Daniel Hyde conducts the City of London Choir for festival Choral Evensong, with music representing great British cathedrals. Early Bird savings can be found as two outstanding actors join the festival for the first time this year: Alistair McGowan will narrate a French programme with pianist Mark Bebbington (including Poulenc‘s touching Babar the Elephant), while Juliet Stevenson will play itinerant virtuosa Clara Schumann in Lucy Parham‘s brilliant composer-portrait.

By popular demand after last year’s runaway success, the award-winning duo Eleanor Grant and Gus McQuade return by with their unique and delightful take on songs of travel. Meanwhile there is a chance to experience beguiling French and English song from superstar soprano Rachel Nicholls and pianist Michael Dussek, or to be mesmerised by Viv McLean playing tributes by Grieg, Chopin and Beethoven to their homelands.

Iain Farrington is back with his brilliant Art Deco trio for witty jazz takes on familiar shanties, spirituals and melodies from around the world. Ian’s fabulous arrangements of orchestral classics are played by members of the RPO in a fun family concert with youth choir Hackney Choral and City of London Choir – including John Rutter‘s London Town.

Joining these flagship concerts will be charming chamber music from around the world performed by the ever-delightful Brother Tree Sound, Tier3 Trio, the Cassatt Trio and Sonas Quartet; more stunning arrangements from the brilliant brass of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra; and an uplifting finale of song with the City of London Choir – from traditional folk melodies to George Shearing‘s jazz settings to Elgar in Bavaria.

If you’re spoilt for choice, a festival season ticket is just £120 – and you can read more about the festival at the Summer Music in City Churches website. See you there!

Published post no.2,858 – Tuesday 14 April 2026

On this day in 1896 – the first performance of the Lemminkäinen Suite by Sibelius

by Ben Hogwood Image of Sibelius courtesy of Wikipedia, and Finnish photographer Daniel Nyblin

On this day in 1896, the world premiere of Jean SibeliusLemminkäinen Suite took place in Helsinki. The suite, in four distinct movements, has become a popular concert piece and is an early indication of the composer’s ability to tell dramatic tales through the orchestra. In this case the story follows Lemminkäinen in the Kalevala, the Finnish epic of folklore and poetry. The four movements are Lemminkäinen and the Maidens of the Island, The Swan of Tuonela (sometimes placed third and the most popular of the four), Lemminkäinen in Tuonela and Lemminkäinen’s Return

You can listen to a performance below from the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Jukka-Pekka Saraste:

Published post no.2,857 – Monday 13 April 2026

New Music – Brennan Heart, Hi-Lo & Project Zeitgeist: Adagio for Strings (HILOMATIK)

by Ben Hogwood, with text lifted from the press release

It is interesting to monitor the regularity with which Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings gets remixed in dance circles. The track is clearly a hugely popular bridge between classical music and trance – and another new take confirms its staying power.

Here, from the press release, “Three major names in electronic music come together for a powerful new take on one of the most recognizable records in dance music history. Brennan Heart, HI-LO, and Project Zeitgeist (alter ego of Australian hardstyle act Toneshifterz) unite on Adagio For Strings, out now via HILOMATIK – delivering a modern reinterpretation of the legendary Tiësto classic” (Tiesto, of course, putting his own slant on the Barber original).

The press text continues from a dance music perspective. “Looking at the track through a 2026 lens, the trio reshape the iconic melody into something darker, heavier, and built for today’s dancefloors. While the emotional core that made the original so memorable remains intact, this version leans into driving techno rhythms and hard dance intensity.

The result is a track that balances nostalgia with modern production. Brennan Heart brings his unmistakable hard dance energy, HI-LO adds a raw techno edge, and Project Zeitgeist contributes a cinematic touch that amplifies the composition’s drama. That track has already been supported by the likes of Armin van Buuren (live), Space 92 (live), Maddix (live), Nifra (live), and Lilly Palmer.

You can listen below:


“What do you do with one of the most iconic records in dance music history? I have been playing and messing around with different versions of this Tiesto classic over the years, as you may have heard in my sets, but when Brennan Heart sent me a collab idea for a proper hard techno rework of Adagio for Strings, “I knew this one would really stand out and would be perfect for 2026! I had a lot of fun working on this one with him and Project Zeitgeist, and it’s been amazing to see all the reactions to this banger at the shows! :)” – HI-LO

For many listeners, the original Adagio For Strings holds a special place in dance music history. This new version honors that legacy while opening the door for a new generation of festival moments and club memories.

Brennan Heart, HI-LO, and Project Zeitgeist Adagio For Strings is available now via HILOMATIK.

Published post no.2,855 – Sunday 12 April 2026

In Concert – Nelson Goerner, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra / Kazuki Yamada: Hindemith, Rachmaninoff & Bartók

Nelsen Goerner (piano) City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra / Kazuki Yamada

Hindemith Symphonic Metamorphosis of Themes by Carl Maria von Weber (1943)
Rachmaninoff Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini Op.43 (1934)
Bartók Concerto for Orchestra BB123 (1943)

Symphony Hall, Birmingham
Thursday 9 April 2026

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse Pictures (c) Andrew Fox (above) and Marco Borggreve (below)

There was a pleasing overall balance to this evening’s concert from the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and its music director Kazuki Yamada: the three works, written within a decade of each other, drawing extensively on earlier composers or, indeed, traditional music.

If not as familiar as it once was (and not least in Birmingham), Symphonic Metamorphosis of Themes by Carl Maria von Weber is always worth revival – not least for finding Hindemith at his most approachable and uninhibited. It was this latter aspect which came over most vividly here – Yamada securing a forceful though never blowzy response in the opening Allegro, then making the most of its ‘Turandot’ Scherzo’s freewheeling play on Weber’s already recalcitrant overture to which the CBSO responded in like fashion. Easily to underestimate, the Andantino emerged as music of no mean pathos as well as a foil to the final March’s breezy treatment of incisive then jocular melodies, with a close of real panache. Did a smile on the face of certain older punters indicate the latter tune’s audible resemblance to a once popular wartime song?

Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini has become increasingly familiar in recent decades, as has Rachmaninoff’s music as a whole, and tonight’s performance amply underlined why. He may not have partnered the CBSO for several years, but Nelson Goerner secured a rapport from the outset – the initial 15 variations pivoting between impetuosity and inwardness with dextrous assurance, then those three which constitute a ‘slow movement’ rendered with a soulfulness and, in the evergreen Variation XVIII, a deftness such as banished any hint of sentimentality. The closing six variations duly unfolded as a ‘finale’ capricious and scintillating, Goerner at one with the orchestra in rounding off this work with a deathless payoff. Impeccably played if emotionally aloof, BrahmsIntermezzo in A major (Op. 118/2) was the less than apposite encore.

The CBSO has an association with Bartók’s Concerto for Orchestra itself going back decades with the present account notable, above all, for its sheer virtuosity of playing. Interpretatively things was not quite this consistent – the expressive contrasts in its Introduzione just a little inflexibly drawn so that the movement felt no more than the sum of its admittedly impressive parts, with the succession of duets in Presentando le coppie a little too detached from each other for this to become the genial though equally vulnerable scherzando it ideally should be.

Conversely, the Elegia had an ideal balance between wrenching anguish and that unworldly ‘night music’ from which it emerges and into which it ultimately withdraws, while the quirky interplay of styles and parodies – whether Léhar or Shostakovich seems beside the point – in the Intermezzo interrotto never sounded at all contrived. Neither did the Finale disappoint as it navigated between pulsating energy and brazen high jinx, on route to a coda of hushed anticipation capped by a peroration which set the seal on this work in an exhilarating QED.

Overall, a fine showing for the CBSO and Yamada in the wake of their latest European tour. The orchestra returns next week in an enterprising programme of Respighi and Puccini, the latter represented by syntheses from two of his operas devised by the conductor Carlo Rizzi.

To read more about the CBSO’s 2025/26 season, visit the CBSO website. Click on the names for more on their principal conductor Kazuki Yamada and pianist Nelson Goerner

Published post no.2,854 – Saturday 11 April 2026

On Record – MF Robots: III (Part One) (Good People Records)

Reviewed by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

MF Robots is proving to be an unstoppable train of feelgood music. The project was begun by Brand New Heavies founder Jan Kincaid together with former band vocalist Dawn Joseph, with the idea of achieving musical liberation without any ties to genre.

Despite that, soul, funk and jazz inevitably feature high in the mix, with the two linking on a series of carefree club-based songs.

What’s the music like?

Summer was invented for bands like MF Robots! Their music takes you into the sunshine with immediate effect, as soon as the opening strains of That’s The Way kick in. This breezy first song is backed up by the call to arms that is Children Of The World, a classic soul number.

Cares are well and truly thrown to the side as the album unfolds, with a style rooted somewhere in the late 1970s of Earth, Wind & Fire but with Brazilian, jazz and soul thrown in to the melting pot in liberal measure. Through The Pain is the pick of these freer numbers, a persuasive sway to its rhythms and heat-soaked keyboards.

The Pressure offers a sultry complement to the quicker tracks, while Glide, a love story, and Hello Sunshine offer up radio-friendly choruses. Lay It Back, meanwhile, harks back to the best, communal numbers of the Brand New Heavies.

Does it all work?

The best indication of the effectiveness of this album is that once it finishes you’ll want to hear it all over again. It may be short, but III delivers!

Is it recommended?

Yes, enthusiastically. Dawn Joseph has a great voice, and the band deliver summery funk in abundance. If you have an acre of sunshine to fill, use MF Robots as your soundtrack!

Listen / Buy

Published post no.2,853 – Friday 10 April 2026