May 1, 2026
Athens, GR 14 C
Expand search form
Blog

Fast falls the Birmingham eventide

Fast falls the Birmingham eventide

On of the reasons orchestras organise choral concerts is because amateur singers have families who usually book to hear them.

Not in Birmingham, apparently.

One of our moles tells us that, with three hours to go, tonight’s concert, involving the UK premiere of John Luther Adams’s Vespers of the Blessed Earth, has sold just one-fifth of its tickets. And that’s with two choirs singing.

The upper parts of Symphony Hall are being closed off to make the place seem less deserted.

The other work on the programme is Sibelius second symphony.

This is turning into a season of great discontent.

The post Fast falls the Birmingham eventide appeared first on Slippedisc.

Previous Article

Illinois names music director

Next Article

Pappano leaves Covent Garden with a final 30% pay rise

You might be interested in …

Does Netrebko still matter?

Does Netrebko still matter?

A panoply of politicians, writers and not-quite celebrities have written to the Guardian, urging the Royal Opera House to cancel the Russian soprano Anna Netrebko, who will sing Tosca next month and Turandot later in […]

Not so much Verismo: Eleanor Burke's somewhat abstract staging of Leoncavallo's Pagliacci for English Touring Opera provides a fine setting for Ronald Samm's powerful performance as Canio

Not so much Verismo: Eleanor Burke’s somewhat abstract staging of Leoncavallo’s Pagliacci for English Touring Opera provides a fine setting for Ronald Samm’s powerful performance as Canio

Leoncavallo: Pagliacci – Harry Grigg, Matthew Siveter, Ronald Samm – English Touring Opera (Photo: © Richard Hubert Smith) Leoncavallo: Pagliacci; Ronald Samm, Paula Sides, Matthew Siveter, director: Eleanor Burke, conductor: Gerry Cornelius; English Touring Opera […]