17 May 2012
Voice in a Million-CANCELLED
7:30 PM
500 members of The Voice in a Million Choir, in an evening of awe inspiring entertainment..
More Info23 May 2012
25 May 2012
BBC NOW-Debussy & Shostakovich
7:30 PM
DUE TO THE ARRIVAL OF THE OLYMPIC TORCH OUTSIDE THE HALL PLEASE ALLOW EXTRA TIME WHEN TRAVELLING TO THIS CONCERT. The vibrant orchestral colours of Debussy’s Images conjure the heat, dancing crowds, and intoxicating fragrance of Spain, including the atmospheric sun-drenched Iberia. Shostakovich’s troubled and searingly urgent First Violin Concerto is one of his greatest works..
More InfoBook Now26 May 2012
Ramin-In Concert
7:30 PM
Ramin received global acclaim starring in The Phantom of the Opera 25th anniversary concert; performed at the Royal Albert Hall and broadcast around the world; and is one of Sony’s most exciting new signings, with a much anticipated new album released in March 2012..
More InfoBook Now29 May 2012
Roots Unearthed-Alasdair Fraser and Natalie Haas
8:00 PM
The musical partnership between Alasdair Fraser, long regarded as Scotland’s premier fiddle ambassador, and the sizzlingly talented young California cellist Natalie Haas may not seem an obvious one. Fraser, acclaimed by the San Francisco Examiner as “the Michael Jordan of Scottish fiddling,” has a concert and recording career spanning 30 years..
More InfoBook NowLunchtime Concert-Mavron Quartet
1:00 PM
To mark the Mavron Quartet’s Tenth anniversary, the Hall’s Ensemble in Residence have commissioned a work from Welsh composer Rhian Samuel with a Women Make Music award from the PRS for Music Foundation. The work will premier at this Lunchtime concert, a real treat for all..
More InfoBook Now30 May 2012
Gentlemen of the Road presents Mumford & Sons SOLD OUT
7:30 PM
Sold Out Winners of Brit Award for Best Album in 2010 come to Cardiff as part of limited UK tour with a vibe falling somewhere between 'travelling Victorian circus' and 'Victorian travelling circus'.
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Concquering the Antarctic-Review 7/2/2012
Rian Evans-The Guardian
The City of London Sinfonia's commemoration of the centenary of Robert Scott's ill-fated Antarctic expedition - they reached the south pole, but perished on their return - had a particular resonance for Cardiff. Scott's ship, the Terra Nova, set sail from the Welsh port, carrying coal as backup fuel, and was met there on its return by Scott's widow Kathleen and son Peter.
Scott's diaries and letters, found on his body and incredibly affecting, were read aloud by Hugh Bonneville during the first half of the evening. Extracts from Vaughan Williams's score for the 1948 film Scott of the Antarctic set the scene. Bonneville's delivery was shipshape and, while amplification detracted from the intimacy, the realisation that Roald Amundsen's Norwegian team had beaten them to the Pole drained us all.
Cecilia McDowall's new piece, Seventy Degrees Below Zero, followed. Working with poet Seán Street, McDowall sets Scott's farewell letter to Kathleen, with string-writing that offers a contemporary equivalent of Vaughan Williams. It was also imbued with Brittenesque colouring, by virtue of Robert Murray's tenor and the horn lines. In the final setting, To My Widow, passion and pain struck home.
Herbert Ponting's photographs of the expedition then formed a background for Vaughan Williams's Sinfonia Antarctica. More sparingly used, the stunning images might have added their unique atmosphere at the outset; with the Symphony, it spelled overkill. Under Stephen Layton, the CLS's strong playing, evoking the music's ultimate desolation, would have said it all.
Tiddly Prom Part of The Welsh Proms Cardiff
Dave Owens, South Wales Echo
IF there is one word to describe the Tiddly Prom, it's delightful.
Staged as part of the wider Welsh Proms, this show created especially for the little ones hooks you in from first moment to the last.
The Tiddly Prom, or Bert's Magical Musical Allotment to give it its proper title, is produced by Arts Active - the education, community and Audience Engagement department of St David's Hall and the New Theatre.
Pis performed by seasoned actors Richard Berry (as the eponymous Bert) and Helen Woods (as Bert's bessie mate Cherry) and the duo are joined by the Tiddly Prom Brass Trio.
We join Bert on his allotment as we find out how his garden grows through the seasons with silly songs, lots of laughs and a little unscripted mayhem - as both actors interact and improvise to great effect with an entranced audience of under-5s.
The fact that they hold the attention of easily distracted pre-schoolers - not known for their ability to sit anywhere for any length of time - for the whole of the charming 45 minute show is testament to the magical story both actors weave, the fun nature of their rollicking songs they perform and the fact the whole show cracks along at a rapid fire pace.
The musical accompaniment from the brass trio is wonderful, while the educational value of the show - as we learn about the seasons and how our garden grows, is equally as valuable.
Tiddly it may be titled, but massive is the impression it will leave on your child.
Orchestra of Welsh National Opera 21/1/2011
Rian Evans/Guardian
In this programme, spanning three and a half centuries and from Bach to Kurtág, the Orchestra of Welsh National Opera could have made no stronger a statement of their credentials. If only the company's choice of operas could be as bold.
The orchestra always relishes the occasions it gets out of the pit, but their conductor and music director Lothar Koenigs had them flung even further and wider than usual around St David's Hall in the disparate instrumental groups required by György Kurtág for his ... quasi una fantasia ... . For Kurtág, it is the spatial relationships - between the piano, taking centre stage, flanked by a cimbalom and timpani, and the other variously dispersed players - that form the crux of the matter. It was not simply the tension bristling across the divides that held the interest, but the nature and quality of soundscape created.
Peter Donohoe, who took the piano part in the Kurtág, was also the soloist in Bartók's Second Piano Concerto, and his usual ebullient, forceful, style helped the contrapuntal exchanges emerge with striking clarity. Koenigs's choice of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony reverted to safe territory. Nevertheless, it was delivered with bite and energy, as well as notable pianissimo control of the opening of the Allegretto.
Some of the orchestra's renewed dynamic must be credited not just to Koenigs, but to violinist David Adams. His inspired leadership of the 10 players in Bach's Brandenburg Concerto, No 3 in G, BWV1048, which opened the evening, made it a vibrant counterpart to the Kurtág and thought-provoking, too.
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