Like other venues, Conway Hall has had to cancel and postpone its planned season for April to June 2020. Some of the hall's spoken word events have gone on-line, whilst as a little compensation for the music that we will be missing at the Sunday Concerts series, music director Simon Callaghan has put together a Spotify playlist of the music that would have been performed.
And, so that you can re-created the experience a little more, my programme notes for the concerts have gone on line, so you can catch up with reading about the music as you listen.
Tuesday, 28 April 2020
Conway Hall Sunday Concerts goes on-line with a playlist and programme notes
Labels:
Conway Hall,
on-line
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts this month
-
Wagner: Das Rheingold - Deutsche Oper Berlin (Photo: Bernd Uhlig) Wagner: Der Ring des Nibelungen ; director: Stefan Herheim, conductor: Sir...
-
Alexander James Edwards The tenor Alexander James Edwards has popped up on this blog over the years, whether it be singing Pollione to ...
-
Creative Minds in Song (2023) In this guest posting pianist Gavin Roberts, artistic director of Song in the City, introduces Creative Minds...
-
Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro in rehearsal - Ellie Neate, Danielle de Niese, Jack Sandison - Wild Arts (Photo: Anastasia Tikhonova) W...
-
Mozart: Le nozze di Figaro - Andrey Zhilikhovsky, Masabane Cecilia Rangwanasha, Louise Alder, Alex Esposito - Royal Opera House (Photo: Mi...
-
Neil Gaiman I had been looking forward to Neil Gaiman's 'The truth is a cave in the Black Mountains' at the Barbican Hall, ...
-
Smetana Dalibor ; Dana Burašová, Ivan Kusnjer, Alžběta Poláčková, Richard Samek, BBC Singers, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Jiři Bělohláv...
-
Puccini: La fanciulla de West - José de Eça, Robert Hayward - Opera Holland Park, 2026 (Photo: Craig Fuller) Puccini: La fanciulla del Wes...
-
Mozart: The Marriage of Figaro - Timothy Nelson, Ellie Neate, Elinor Rolf Johnson - Wild Arts (Photo: Lucy Toms) Mozart: The Marriage of F...
-
Wagner: Rienzi - Last scene of Act3 at the Théâtre Lyrique, Paris in 1869 In a series of essays I will be looking at the influence of th...

No comments:
Post a Comment