by Ben Hogwood Image of Sibelius courtesy of Wikipedia, and Finnish photographer Daniel Nyblin
Having just returned from Tallinn, Estonia, I feel particularly close the music of Finnish composer Jean Sibelius. On this day in 1895 one of his early orchestral works, The Wood Nymph, was premiered – and you can listen below:
Arriving on May 29th, ‘Opvs Novum: A Requiem Reworked’ finds Penelope Trappes inviting a carefully chosen circle of kindred spirits to dismantle and reanimate the funereal intensity of her fifth full-length album ‘A Requiem’. Conceived as more than a conventional remix record, the project reframes the original work through ten distinct artistic voices.
Where the original album was stark, ritualistic, and inward facing, these reinterpretations expand its emotional architecture. Klara Lewis and Flora Yin-Wong sculpt their tracks into glacial drones, Gazelle Twin and PRIZMA9 heighten the gothic unease, while Midwife and Julia Holter draw out its devotional melancholy into something almost hymnal. Contributions from Stephen Mallinder (Cabaret Voltaire), Saint Etienne, Smote, Dania, and Sarahsson underline Trappes’ unique position between sacred lament and avant electronic ritual, transforming her songs into a series of spectral mirrors that refract grief through industrial pulse, haunting ambience, and dream state pop.
On the new version of ‘Platinum’, long-running London trio Saint Etienne bring their renowned affinity for blending electronic textures with pop sensibility to Trappes’ world, drawing out the track’s underlying sense of drama and reshaping it into a driving, hypnotic piece that balances tension with release. Leaning into the original’s melodic core and rich instrumentation, they build a dense, immersive arrangement.
Pete Wiggs from Saint Etienne tells us; “I love the slightly dark and cinematic moods of Penelope’s music. Platinum was a great track to mix with its haunting melody and heavenly cello arrangement – it felt just right for an ear pummeling trance-inducing rework”
Trappes expands; “It takes a collective energy to bring anything to life, and some of my favourite artists came together to bring their own beautifully unique energy to reinvent ‘A Requiem’. I wanted Opvs Novum to feel like an original album with an aura all of its own.
The ten artists here exploring these themes of death and grief are humans who have inspired and supported me. It means so much to bring them all together, and I am infinitely humbled by their transcendental creations. I thank you all. As we all comprehend our own collective grief in a world that would rather keep us separated and fearful, I hope this can be a small testament to what it means to reimagine a collective hymnal spirit.”
2025’s ‘A Requiem’ was a musical service in honour of the dead, a sanctuary Trappes built for herself to explore familial chaos and history. “I was looking for an equilibrium between a ‘heaven’ and a ‘hell’,” she explained at the time of release, “screaming out to the wisdom of our foremothers, surfacing and leading me into true strength and beauty. I listened to the sorrow closely. Death is a part of our reality. Inevitable. Omnipresent. But nightmares can be beautiful.”
The album received support from the likes of Pitchfork, The Wire, MOJO, Uncut, Record Collector, Bandcamp Daily, NPR, PROG, Electronic Sound, The Line of Best Fit, Crack, Clash Magazine, Nowness, Stereogum, Gorilla vs Bear, Resident Advisor, Futurism Restated, BBC Radio 3’s Unclassified, 6 Music’s Forever Dark, New Music Fix Daily, Lauren Laverne, Deb Grant, Tom Ravenscroft, and many more.
Despite formal vocal training in opera and jazz when she was younger, it was not until after her daughter was born that Penelope began writing her own music. She says coming into music later has been eye-opening, and she laments the fact that women past 30 are too often discarded by the music industry. “Creativity doesn’t go away when you get older, it flourishes, changes and grows like all of life,” she says. “It amazes me that this is still something for society to wrap its head around.”
Penelope released her acclaimed trilogy, ‘Penelope One’, ‘Two’ and ‘Three’, on Fabric’s Houndstooth label. In between instalments of the trilogy, she released a series of experimental EPs. She demonstrated her versatility in the extended 25-minute deep listening composition ‘Gnostic State’, and the arpeggiated electronics and minimalism on the ‘Eel Drip’ EP, inspired by Francesca Woodman’s self-portraits with eels. She also released an album of reworks, ‘Penelope Redeux’, with contributions from Cosey Fanni Tutti, Mogwai and Félicia Atkinson, and the cassette ‘Mother’s Blood’, a vocal free reinterpretation of ‘Penelope Three’, concluding with the live scoring of a one-hour film at Sonica Festival.
Penelope’s fourth album, ‘Heavenly Spheres’, was released in 2023 on her own Nite Hive imprint. It was composed using just piano, voice and an old reel-to-reel tape deck during a two-week artist residency for Britten Pears Arts. 2024’s ‘Hommelen’, the austere and beautifully severe result of her Halldorophone residency at EMS Stockholm, was released on Paralaxe Editions.
Some more Bach for you, midweek…in the shape of an exciting new recording about to be released by Hyperion. Mahan Esfahani, in his quest to record Bach’s complete keyboard music for the label, has reached the keyboard concertos.
With the Britten Sinfonia he has recorded all of these works, and a taster can be heard below:
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!
by Ben Hogwood Image of Sibelius courtesy of Wikipedia, and Finnish photographer Daniel Nyblin
On this day in 1896, the world premiere of Jean Sibelius’ Lemminkäinen 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: