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About Arcana

My name is Ben Hogwood, editor of the Arcana music site (arcana.fm)

On Tour – Cabaret Voltaire

Cabaret Voltaire in rehersal room

from the press release. Photo credits Peter Hill (above), Leon Chew (Cabaret Voltaire, below), Teri Varhol (Gazelle Twin)

Following their return to Sheffield at the weekend for a sold-out Sensoria Festival performance, Stephen ‘Mal’ Mallinder and Chris Watson have announced details of their Final UK Tour, starting on 10 October 2026 at Birmingham Town Hall and finishing at the Sheffield Octagon on 25 October, with Gazelle Twin confirmed as special guest across all the dates. 

Pre-sale opens at 10am GMT on 30 October, followed by general sale at 10am GMT on Friday 31 October. Buy HERE, except Sheffield, available HERE

The announcement follows news of this year’s highly anticipated sold-out tour, which marks 50 years since the live launch of one of Britain’s most influential electronic bands, Cabaret Voltaire, at the Sheffield Students Union Refectory on 13 May 1975.

Talking about the newly announced dates, Stephen Mallinder says: “What a wonderful opportunity to go round the block one more time and share that with one of the most unique and spectacular artists we know. The connective tissue between ourselves, our history, and the world Gazelle Twin now conjures up, will be out there and shared with people. It seems like a special, magical moment.

Composer, producer, and performance artist Elizabeth Bernholz, aka Gazelle Twin, will be special guest across the tour: “Pinch me. Go on. I’m feeling excessively lucky at the prospect of touring with Cabaret Voltaire in 2026. They are electronic music pioneers, but also the loveliest, kindest folk in music that I could ever hope to share the stage with.”

The current tour continues next month, with supports confirmed: dark experimental pop musician, producer and performer Greta Caroll aka CURRENTMOODGIRL will perform at Glasgow’s SWG3 Warehouse; bass-pushing experimentalist and member of Afro-Futurist performance collective Brownton Abbey, I Am Fya, will support at Manchester Gorilla; engineer turned artistic world builder, Gareth Smith, brings Vanishing’s evocative music and resonant lyrics to Birmingham’s Xoyo; Soborgnost, lo-fi dubwave dancepunk mutation from Jim Osman, will join the bill at London’s ICA, and Alexander Tucker’s electronic guise, MICROCORPS, brings heavy mutant techno modular systems to Brighton’s ACCA.

CABARET VOLTAIRE LIVE – 2025

17 Nov – Glasgow, SWG3 Warehouse w/ CURRENTMOODGIRL – SOLD OUT

18 Nov – Manchester, Gorilla w/ I Am Fya – SOLD OUT

19 Nov – Birmingham, Xoyo w/ Vanishing – SOLD OUT

21 Nov – London, ICA w/ Soborgnost – SOLD OUT

22 November – Brighton, ACCA w/ MICROCORPS – SOLD OUT

CABARET VOLTAIRE LIVE – 2026

21 Feb – Norwich, Synth East Festival

10 October – Birmingham Town Hall w/ Gazelle Twin

11 October – Liverpool Arts Club w/ Gazelle Twin

13 October – Nottingham Rock City w/ Gazelle Twin

14 October – Cardiff Tramshed w/ Gazelle Twin

15 October – Bath Forum w/ Gazelle Twin

17 October – Newcastle Boiler Shop w/ Gazelle Twin

18 October – Glasgow Barrowland w/ Gazelle Twin

19 October – Manchester Albert Hall w/ Gazelle Twin

21 October – Bexhill De La Warr Pavilion w/ Gazelle Twin

22 October – London Roundhouse w/ Gazelle Twin

25 October – Sheffield Octagon w/ Gazelle Twin

Published post no.2,701 – Tuesday 28 October 2025

New music – Frieder Nagel & Daniel Brandt: Who Knows (InFiné)

adapted from the press release by Ben Hogwood

Frieder Nagel continues his new series with Who Knows, featuring Daniel Brandt — composer, drummer, and co-founder of the acclaimed Brandt Brauer Frick.

A dark and menacing track unfolds under severe rhythmic tension. While constantly building, its long elegiac melodies slowly evolve and dissolve within majestic string arrangements and Nagel’s signature Moog sound. The single is accompanied by two additional versions: a shorter, more condensed radio edit, and a beatless ambient version that brings the meticulously crafted sound design to the forefront.

Nagel and Brandt first met in 2019, when Nagel directed Brandt’s music video Flamingo for Erased Tapes. A year later, they collaborated on a dance opera with Japanese choreographer Fukiko Takase at Uferstudios Berlin, which premiered at the Gluck Festspiele. Who Knows finally captures on tape the unique creative chemistry that sparks whenever the two artists meet.

Frieder expands on the track. “In the end, we are total opposites. Daniel is literally just back from touring Asia — he’s constantly on the move with his band, his solo project, or his work as a producer and director in London. Drums are, in a way, extroverted — expressive and primarily rhythmic. I, on the other hand, live a much calmer life in the woods, focusing on introspective works like audiovisual sound art, installations, or score production, where melody and synthesis take the lead.”

It is precisely this contrast that makes Who Knows so captivating: Nagel’s calm, melodic sensibility colliding with Brandt’s impulsive, almost restless energy. The result is a striking duality — a tension that is hard to define but impossible to ignore.

Where Do As I Please (above), released earlier this year, explored the theme of overcoming creative struggle, Who Knows feels like a blueprint for Nagel’s new artistic direction — moving further away from his downtempo and electronica beginnings toward new shores and inspirations, offering raw, unpredictable music that leaves the listener wondering what comes next.

Published post no.2,700 – Monday 27 October 2025

On this day – the birth of Domenico Scarlatti

Picture: used courtesy of Wikipedia

by Ben Hogwood

Earlier in the week we marked 300 years since the birth of Alessandro Scarlatti..and now we switch attention to his son Domenico, born 340 years ago today.

Domenico was a prodigious composer of keyboard sonatas, a form he helped revolutionise. Here are some in excellent versions from Anne Quéffelec:

ublished post no.2,695 – Thursday 22 October 2025

On this day – the death of Georges Bizet & birth of Johann Strauss II

by Ben Hogwood

Today we mark two significant anniversary the world of classical music.

The French composer Georges Bizet died on this day in 1875. Primarily remembered for the opera Carmen, Bizet had many more strings to his bow, as a composer for the stage, the orchestra and the solo voice. One of his most popular orchestral works is the fresh-faced Symphony in C major, which you can enjoy below:

Meanwhile today also marks 200 years since the birth of the king of the waltz, Johann Strauss II. Among the miniature masterpieces in triple time that are such a feature of Johann’s output is the classic waltz On The Beautiful Blue Danube, performed below:

In concert – Laurence Kilsby, Christopher Parkes, Sinfonia of London / John Wilson: Serenade @ Barbican Hall, London

Laurence Kilsby (tenor), Christopher Parkes (horn), Sinfonia of London / John Wilson

Vaughan Williams Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis (1910)
Britten Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings Op.31 (1943)
Bliss Music for Strings B66 (1935)
Delius arr. Fenby Late Swallows (1916, arr. 1962)
Elgar Introduction and Allegro Op.47 (1904-05)

Barbican Hall, London
Wednesday 22 October 2025

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

One can only commend John Wilson and Sinfonia of London for, in addition to an ambitious recording schedule for Chandos, frequently taking its programmes on tour – as has been the case with this judicious selection of works for string orchestra tonight being heard in London.

There could hardly be an acoustic less suited to Vaughan Williams’s Tallis Fantasia than that of Barbican Hall, yet Wilson went a good deal of the way toward making it succeed by having the main string body – and solo quartet – to the front of the platform with the subsidiary group arrayed along its rear. The outer section were taken slowly and almost impassively, but there was no lack of impetus or fervency as the central phase built cumulatively towards its climax.

The relatively modest number of strings seemed ideally suited to Britten’s Serenade. Laurence Kilsby (who made a fine contribution to Bliss’s The Beatitudes at this year’s Proms) brought real tenderness to Pastorale and ardour to Nocturne, while Christopher Parkes was suitably plangent in Elegy and dextrousness itself in Dirge. Tenor and hornist joined delightfully in Hymn, then Wilson drew playing of fastidious poise in Sonnet. Just a little unsteady in the Prologue, Parkes excelled in the offstage Epilogue with its ethereal reprise of that opening music – so rounding off a performance that proved affecting and unaffected in equal measure.

Live and in the studio, Wilson has affirmed a commitment to the music of Bliss which could hardly have been more evident than in Music for Strings which formed the centrepiece of this concert. It had been written for the Vienna Philharmonic to premiere at the Salzburg Festival and, if its formidable technical demands no longer sound forbidding, there can have been few performances of this virtuosity or insight. Trenchant and impulsive, the opening Allegro was followed by an Andante whose sustained eloquence never excluded lightness of touch – with the speculative transition into the final Allegro as deftly handled as the Presto with which this work surges to its headlong close. Not merely a timely revival, this was no less a vindication.

Introducing this second half, Wilson had remarked how Delius’ music needs to be coaxed into yielding up its secrets as surely as it needs selling to the musicians. Late Swallows succeeded on both fronts. As arranged by Eric Fenby from the composer’s only mature string quartet, it takes its place among the latter’s most haunting evocations, and not least in a central section whose rapt intensity brought an emotional frisson that tangibly held its listeners spellbound.

Elgar’s Introduction and Allegro may, by contrast, be a piece that plays itself but it still calls for interpretive input of a high order. Wilson responded with an unusually swift reading such as emphasized its nervous intensity and often volatile changes of mood, though there was no lack of cohesion or underlying momentum in a performance that took such testing passages as the central fugato assuredly in its stride prior to a glowing apotheosis then decisive close.

A performance, moreover, as set the seal on a memorable evening’s music-making. All these pieces, save the Britten, have been recorded by Wilson and Sinfonia of London for Chandos, their advocacy of Bliss hopefully continuing well beyond this 50th anniversary of his death.

Click here to read Arcana’s review of English Music for Strings, the Chandos album containing the Bliss and Vaughan Williams works performed in this concert.

Click also on the links for more information on the Sinfonia of London and their conductor John Wilson, along with soloists Laurence Kilsby and Christopher Parkes. For more information on Bliss, you can visit the Arthur Bliss Society

Published post no.2,697 – Friday 24 October 2025