With the hot weather continuing in the UK, here is a delightful few minutes spent in the company of Samuel Barber – his only work for wind quintet:
Published post no.2,572 – Sunday 22 June 2025
With the hot weather continuing in the UK, here is a delightful few minutes spent in the company of Samuel Barber – his only work for wind quintet:
Published post no.2,572 – Sunday 22 June 2025

Sheku Kanneh-Mason (cello), City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra / Kazuki Yamada
Elgar Cello Concerto in E minor Op.85 (1919)
Tchaikovsky Symphony no.5 in E minor Op.64 (1888)
Symphony Hall, Birmingham
Thursday 19 June 2025 2:15pm
Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse Picture of Sheku Kanneh-Mason (c) Andrew Fox
The City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra’s ‘Season of Joy’ ended (at least at its home base) this afternoon with this concert in E minor, featuring major works by two composers whose wresting triumph from out of adversity was by no means always their strongest suit.
It is all too prevalent these days to talk of Elgar’s Cello Concerto as being the ‘end of an era’ statement, so credit to Sheku Kanneh-Mason for leavening any overt fatalism with a lyrical intensity which paid dividends in the musing restiveness of the first movement – its indelible opening gesture rendered with an understated defiance that set the course for what followed. Nor was the Scherzo’s glancing irony at all undersold, its tensile energy seamlessly absorbing the mock nobility of its secondary theme on the way to a conclusion of throwaway deftness.
Others may have summoned greater fervency from the Adagio, yet Kanneh-Mason’s unforced poise in this ‘song without words’ was its own justification and an ideal entrée into the more complex finale. Especially impressive was his methodical while never calculated building of tension towards a climax of tangible emotional intensity, capped with the terse stoicism of its coda. Kazuki Yamada and the CBSO were unfailingly responsive in support. Kanneh-Mason returned with the 18th (Sarabande) of Mieczysław Weinberg’s 24 Preludes (1969) as a sombre encore.
If to imply that by being his most ‘classical’ such piece, Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony may also be his most predictable, Yamada evidently had other ideas. Certainly, there was nothing passive about the first movement’s scene-setting Andante, Oliver Janes palpably ominous in its ruminative clarinet theme. A smattering of over-emphases in phrasing just occasionally impeded the Allegro’s rhythmic flow but was outweighed by the gripping spontaneity of the whole. Even finer was the Andante cantabile, as undulating lower strings launched french horn player Elspeth Dutch’s eloquent take on its ineffable main melody. The eventual climax was curtailed by a brutal intrusion of the ‘fate’ motto, before the music subsided into its calmly regretful close. Whether or not Tchaikovsky’s greatest slow movement, Yamada’s reading made it seem so.
Interesting this conductor made an attacca to the ensuing Valse, which proved effective even if one between the first two movements would have been even more so. Whatever its laissez-faire elegance, this cannily structured movement is more than a mere interlude – not least for the way the motto steals in at its close. Yamada ensured it connected directly into the Finale’s slow introduction, its fervency reined-in so as not to pre-empt the energy of the main Allegro as it surged toward one of the most theatrical ‘grand pauses’ in music. Taking this confidently in its stride, the CBSO was equally in control of an apotheosis whose grandiloquence never risked overkill. The charge of insincerity that its composer found hard to refute might never have gone away, yet heard as an inevitable outcome, this was pretty convincing all the same.
It found the CBSO in formidable shape as it embarks on a two-week tour of Japan under its music director. A handful of UK concerts (including an annual appearance at the Proms) then precedes next season which begins with more Elgar in the guise of The Dream of Gerontius.
For details on the 2025-26 season, Orchestral music that’s right up your street!, head to the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra website. Click on the names to read more about soloist Sheku Kanneh-Mason and conductor Kazuki Yamada
Published post no.2,571 – Saturday 21 June 2025
It’s a hot summer evening here in the UK – and thoughts have turned to the wonderful score Mendelssohn completed as incidental music to Shakespeare’s play.
Here it is, with Walter Weller conducting the Royal Scottish National Orchestra:

by Ben Hogwood
What’s the story?
Nine years have passed since Richard Fearless released a Death In Vegas album. That’s an awful lot of life – and a good deal of it has been packed into the nine tracks making up Death Mask.
For it is an autobiographical album, with explicit references to his nearest and dearest, yet all the while staying true to its musical function, ranging from drones to danceable beats. Fearless was keen to leave his output unpolished, a refreshing approach for an electronic music producer – so that means ‘dirty circuitry and rough-hewn textures at the fore’. These are helped by the inclusion of natural feedback and white noise from his Thameside Metal Box studio, a musical instrument every bit as important as the keyboards and electronics that output the music.
What’s the music like?
Very dark…and yet, ultimately, empowering.
As its title implies, Death Mask isn’t an album to shy away from thoughts about the end of life – but nor is it going to sit there and mope. For when Fearless drops some of the massive beats here there is a barely restrained euphoria that kicks in, a feeling that we’re dancing for our very existence.
That certainly happens on the epic Roseville, which goes for broke, but also on the warmer Your Love. Hazel is a multilayered track, a whirlwind rhythm section contrasted by a fuzzy drone, an uncannily effective portrayal of the emotions at play in the funeral of a close friend – in this case, Richard’s own father.
The studio makes its presence felt in the remarkable While My Machines Gently Weep, the rhythm section positively primal and the distortion turned up to the max.
Influences on Fearless’s work here range far and wide, with healthy nods to dub and techno. He credits Ramleh, Terrence Dixon, Jamal Moss, Mika Vanio and TM 404 explicitly as inspirations – though a name not mentioned but surely in his mind is that of Andrew Weatherall.
Does it all work?
It does – though Death Mask is certainly not for every mood. It’s a heavy-set album at times, but for every bit of darkness there are shards of dazzling light.
Is it recommended?
It certainly is. Richard Fearless has taken Death In Vegas on quite the journey since it began in the mid-90s, but this is arguably the album that has the greatest substance. Power and grace, rolled into one.
For fans of… Andrew Weatherall, Trentemøller, Luke Slater, Black Dog, Cabaret Voltaire
Listen / Buy
Published post no.2,568 – Thursday 19 June 2025

by Ben Hogwood Photo (c) unknown
Yesterday we heard of the sad news of the death of inspirational pianist and writer Alfred Brendel, at the age of 94. Brendel leaves a quite incredible body of recordings, most made for Philips Classics, now Decca – and they form the body of the playlist linked below:
Published post no.2,567 – Wednesday 18 June 2025