Conductor Vasily Petrenko’s British values

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Somewhere in the depths of the internet lies a photo of Vasily Petrenko with a wad of £5 notes, posing next to a bin. It was part of the Liverpool Echo’s “Be A Binner, Not A Sinner” campaign to clean up Liverpool and improve its reputation, after the writer Bill Bryson infamously arrived in the city to find they were having, in his words, “a festival of litter.” The Echo would give £5 to anyone found putting their rubbish into public litter bins; on one occasion, Petrenko joined them to hand out the cash. “I’m not sure it was successful,” Petrenko notes today. (A 2022 report found that the city had three times more litter than the national average.)

In his time as the Chief Conductor of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Petrenko threw himself into musical and civic life in Liverpool, and was garlanded for it, receiving the city’s “Honorary Scouser” award in 2009, and becoming a Citizen of Honour seven years later. I attended one of his victory lap concerts in 2021, as the RLPO bade a passionate farewell to their adopted son. “The special feeling of orchestra, conductor and city in sync was certainly on show this evening,” I wrote at the time

In 2021, Petrenko left to become Music Director of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (RPO) in London. We meet near his new-ish home in West Hampstead, an affluent area of northwest London. It is the school holidays, and Petrenko has more time than I think either he or I realize. What we are meant to be talking about—the RPO’s upcoming semi-staged performance of “Iolanta”, the late Tchaikovsky opera rarely performed in the UK—largely gets lost amid the things he really wants to talk about.

The role of the conductor in society is discussed regularly, but less so how the conductor perceives that society. We spoke about British and European values, when (if ever) he might return to Russia, and water taps.

VAN: The city of Liverpool welcomes the conductor of its orchestra as a sort of civic leader, as opposed to a music director who turns up a couple of times a week and conducts some concerts. It’s a role that goes beyond the concert hall. 

Vasily Petrenko: It’s important anywhere you are; of course, you have to be professional on the podium when you rehearse or when they perform, but there’s a social aspect too. It’s an essential question: Why we are there, and what we are doing for the community? Concerts are concerts; OK, the people are coming, and they are enjoying it. But then, what are we doing in wider terms? What are we doing for schools, for education, for deprived people, for mental health, for everything else? I think a lot of orchestras are improving, but there’s still a lot of improvement to be done.

[In Liverpool] we started so many programs. Together with the NHS, musicians were going to the prisons—to the strict prisons—and were teaching someone imprisoned for maybe three life terms how to play the flute. (They don’t have a chance to be released, because their crimes are big. Their behavior internally in the prison was so much improved—at least that’s what the officials were saying.)

Or In Harmony, which improved the whole area: We’re performing for the people, open air concerts, festivals, all sorts of things. Ultimately, we are there to make the life of locals better.

But in your view, it’s the conductor who leads all of this, as opposed to the Learning and Participation team?

Well, not just the conductor. But of course, you can implement a lot of things, and a lot of those ideas started from my impulse, let’s put it this way. Of course you need a team, you won’t be able to do it without a team. 

In a way, this is much more difficult in London. Liverpool: one city, one orchestra, and everybody feels this identity. [In London] at some point there [were] 12 orchestras; now I think it’s a bit less, but still. Where will you identify yourself? Will you aim for Camden, or will you try to get to the broader city of Westminster? It’s not just competition; it’s exactly how you make this identity.

In that sense, LSO is in a better position, because they at least have the almost permanent hall—Barbican plus [LSO] St Luke’s, so they have this place where, if you go there for classical concerts, most of the time you listen to them. Even with all these pros and cons of the hall, they have this identity. Plus they’re also supported by the City of London, much more than by the federal government.

The others—Philharmonia, London Philharmonic Orchestra, RPO—we never rehearse in the Royal Festival Hall. [It’s] just for dress rehearsals. We rehearse around [the city]. In these two years, I’ve been in Watford, in Woolwich, Blackheath, Croydon, wherever we can. That does not give identity to the place. Plus, Royal Festival Hall is run by a separate team of managers, and especially now, they’re not so interested [in giving] this identity to you.

So what would make it better?

I can tell you what will make London better, definitely: to build a new and good concert hall, because none of the halls [are] good, that’s a problem. Look [at] any big city: you name any capital of Europe, each one of them has a great concert hall for classical music. London? No, I’m sorry, just no.

Plans for a £288m Centre for Music, championed by Simon Rattle upon his return to the London Symphony Orchestra as music director, were officially scrapped in 2021 by the City of London Corporation, citing the unprecedented impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

There’s a chance in Wimbledon with Frank Gehry. There’s a chance for another concert hall in another part of London; how much of that will be coming through, that’s another question. 

Especially at the moment

Now unfortunately, I have to say all the policies of UK governments are very short-sighted. It’s not a secret that one pound invested in culture brings six pounds revenue. 

In 2020, a report by the Centre for Economic and Business Research stated that, in the UK, “the Arts and Culture sector has faced a significant loss of Gross Value Added since the outset of lockdown.”

It’s one of the most profitable things, but it’s not a short-term investment. It’s a long-term investment: You have to invest for five to 10 years, and then you get all this revenue. That’s already been proven. However, they prefer to spend on their arms, munitions, missiles, submarines, and social programs such as benefits, which [are] good for the election next week, but it’s not good for society.

This identity is very important. It’s the same problem which unfortunately, Europe—us, as a continent—is facing now. What are European values? It’s the things which they are just starting to talk about but it’s so difficult and toxic in many ways that people try not to talk about it. Everyone says we are protecting European cultures in current conflicts: Israeli-Palestinian, Russia-Ukraine. What are the values? Define them? Just define them?

This is one of a handful of times in the interview where I’m not sure whether Petrenko is riffing rhetorically, or asking me to define these terms.

I mean, there are cultural values, there are architectural values, there’s a big gulf of religious values, which—historical. Plus there’s the values in the style of life: British style of life, German style of life, French style of life, whatever style of life.

Now if you look into style of life, it’s vanishing. All these theories about diversity and inclusivity are done in a very wrong way. It’s not that we have to adjust, it’s that the others have to adjust. The people who are coming… We’ve started talking in Europe, finally, about the problems with immigrants, which is a massive problem. Here, it’s not that bad in England compared to the other countries. But in other countries, if someone comes into the country, he or she needs to accept its rules, its regulations, learn the language, and live according to the place where they arrived, not opposite. It’s not that the place where they arrive has to accept the rules and regulations of someone who came from very far away. It’s nothing to do with discrimination, not at all. It’s just how to make people accept European values, and there’s so many of them that are not accepting. That’s why the problem is to get [people] into all the different things, and the role of culture can be pivotal in that. It’s tricky.

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Is there an argument for welcoming others, and celebrating them as equal? With the Arts Council, we have seen a general widening of arts funding, away from what in your terms might be deemed “traditional European” forms, like classical music, opera, and theater.

This is fine, but that should be an expansion of an artistic program. It’s not because you cut and trim your core values. And that’s done; that way of trimming. They are not bringing and not organizing something extra; they’re rerouting the money from traditional projects into that.

I can understand it more along those lines. So yours is an argument for massive expansion and inclusion, as opposed to cutting things, and putting funding into other places?

That’s for the whole society, the task for Europe, for the UK: To make all the people who [are] coming, to work. To make all the people who are coming with their unique backgrounds be part of British society. It’s not that Britain becomes part of Indian society.


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You lived in Liverpool, now you’re living in London. Along similar lines: Do you feel you have to be rooted in a place in order to really connect with an orchestra?

It’s better for any music director to live in the place. Normally [that’s how it works], because you live in the place that you are. 

You have to be part of a community. But that’s coming back to what we were talking about. Of course, you have to respect all the different backgrounds of people who are coming, and I think the main role for the orchestra in any community is to do what we do best.

And in your view, the thing they do best is…?

Performing concerts at the best level, mainly of the core classical repertoire. I’m not saying that they should play it all the time, but that should be the backbone of everything. [We shouldn’t play] play two classical repertoire [concerts], seven pop concerts, and 27 events of music from around the world which nobody knows and nobody does.

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That is a criticism that could have been leveled at the RPO in the recent past. 

No, the RPO is very versatile in many ways. I think the balance has shifted a little bit; we started to do more ambitious projects in the Albert Hall, the season outside of the Proms: Mahler 2,3, 8 in one season, British oratorios in another, also this year with “Iolanta” and “Nutcracker,” with the Wagner concert, the Verdi Requiem. Plus on top of that we made very thematically linked concerts in the Royal Festival Hall.

But also, we’re going to Brent for the projects with children, we’re doing various open-air concerts, [of the film music to] “Harry Potter,” and they’re also very important. I would see it as a sort of staircase. So, if you want the first step to meet the orchestra, it’s either at the school concerts, or at these “Harry Potter” shows where you’re coming for the story rather than for the orchestra. If you’re interested in it, then you may come to the next step, which will be probably slightly more pop-ish repertoire. And if you’re still interested, then you can go the classical [music]. This ladder is actually endless because there’s some gurus who are coming for Stockhausen only.

I think every orchestra is very unique. There are orchestras who have such a massive tradition of their own sound, like Concertgebouw, that they’ll maintain it. I spoke to Mariss [Jansons] when he was alive and he was saying to me, “I will probably slightly amend things, maybe just in the direction of a bit more transparency, but I won’t be there to try to make me instead of Concertgebouw.” There are some orchestras who do not have such a long tradition, or have had 10 or 15 years without such big guidance. There, it is more on the side of the music director to influence such things. 

Regarding guest conductors versus music directors, if you have a good contact with the orchestra, if you have this love story that goes on as a love story, then you need to talk less and less about the technical elements, and you’re able to expand more into the music: Not what are the notes, but what is behind the notes; what was the historical context the composer was facing. To me, it’s staggering how many musicians—I’m not blaming them, it’s because they are underpaid and they have to work very hard—but they quite often come to the first rehearsal without any idea what they are playing. Musically, they’re prepared, but who is this composer? What is he doing? Where was he or she living? What was happening?

When you come to any orchestra as a music director, you see things that you have to fix; usually that’s the way. And any orchestra can improve endlessly in this process. Quite often, it’s so many of them that you have to compromise; rehearsal time is very scarce. It’s just figuring out which are more critical, then probably next time, you see those things are already fixed.

In 2022, you made a statement about Russia: “I have decided to suspend my work in Russia, including all future commitments as Artistic Director of the State Academic Symphony Orchestra of Russia ‘Evgeni Svetlanov’, until peace has been restored.” Has anything with your stance changed in that time?

Well, I still hope to come back once peace will be restored, because I think it’s the role of culture to dive in. Ukraine and Russia will not go to [different] planets, they’ll still need to be neighbors. And after such conflicts, there will be a huge amount of hate. It’s inevitable. I’m half-Russian, half-Ukrainian. Part of my family lives in Kyiv, my father still lives in St. Petersburg. We all [have good relationships], a good connection, nothing has changed between us in terms of hate or anything. However, there’s many, many people in many families whom I know who have gone so wildly into opposite directions. So the role of culture will be to stitch those countries together at least to a certain extent. That’s why I hope that I will be allowed to go to Ukraine [and] to go to Russia and to perform in both of those countries. 

In terms of an official role, unfortunately, at one point in 2022, I was forced to write a letter of resignation from that orchestra, officially, for the Ministry of Culture. 

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I didn’t realize it was a resignation.

At first I was temporarily balancing my presence. After that, in about two or three months, I [realized] that if I don’t do it, there might be repercussions for the [State Academic Symphony Orchestra], for the musicians. For me, ultimately, the interests of musicians in the orchestra are my priority, always were and always will be. For that, I wouldn’t say I was forced to leave, but there was no other option but to leave. The orchestra does not have a music director so far, they still work without any.

I think life for many of the musicians is difficult because what you hear and see around the concerts [is] quite different from what you think, and you can tolerate that only to a certain extent. You cannot openly say what you really think because you might be imprisoned. But also keeping silent all the time [is] really difficult. Any art, especially music, you have to be humble, you have to be honest with yourself and with your music. Once you become dishonest, then usually your music suffers. For that, if you think something completely opposite to what is officially said, then it’s difficult, and it’s mounting for musicians.

Can music play an active role in reconciliation? 

This is for sure.

Can it do that?

That was the case in Germany after 1945. At first, nobody wanted even to hear about Germans, and then gradually over 10 years because of the constant investment in art and rebuilding the country, that started to bridge the gaps between Germans and every other country. 

You go to the concert hall, you listen to the concert, do you care who sits next to you? What nationality, what gender, what religion is this person? It doesn’t matter, because you will ultimately share the same emotions. And this is where the power of music—you’re bringing similar emotions to the people, and those similar emotions unite people. That’s a very powerful tool. How and when it will be realized: I wish it will be soon, but it has to be done.

I haven’t had any other choice than to leave the orchestra [in St. Petersburg]. I feel guilty for the orchestra, for the musicians, of course. But I also feel that, just the normal audience in Moscow, what is their guilt? They can’t come to my concert, they can’t listen to it. So in a way, I feel like I’m obliged [to go back] because it’s not the President, it’s not the government, it’s just a simple people. 

You’re performing a semi-staged version of “Iolanta,” something that’s particularly in vogue in the UK. If you do a semi-staged version, obviously it changes the dynamics and the particular relations between the elements that the composer wanted—is it healthy that we’re doing so much semi-staged opera?

What we’re aiming to—I think the Albert Hall is a concern in terms of theater. There were some opera projects fully staged [there], but very few of them were done at the very highest level in terms of staging. What we’re aiming to do is use the new modern technologies—and I’ve been in those demonstration rooms. They allow you to create illusions. Basically, the way new computer, laser, and visual technologies [work], you will see from the audience a wall or set or decoration, while it doesn’t exist, but you will truly believe that this is a wall. It’s already in use for very expensive musicals. So you see the person will have a sword in his or her hand but there’s actually no sword, it’s all done through visual additions to it. 

Did you hear about the AR “Parsifal” at Bayreuth this year, with the goggles?

Yeah, but that loses a little bit, to me, the unity of the public. You sit in the goggles, and you’re in your own world. You don’t see the others and you don’t feel their reaction enough. This is why I think there might be better ways to do that. 

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You miss the collective feeling of being in a concert if you’re just in your own little world.

This is ultimately what we started with: We have to find unity in the world, we have to find unity in society.

There’s a lot of things; look, even because of this Jewish-Palestinian conflict, there’s recommendations for many Jewish people, even in London, to not go to any special major areas. This is not something that should exist. 

But if we properly embrace the diversity of both peoples living in harmony and in their distinct ways, in which they can share some of their things and have other things separate, then surely…

But what will we do with the people who does not want to embrace diversity? Diversity and “embracement” goes both ways. You embrace someone, someone embraces you. So far it’s a lot of, you embrace someone, and someone does not do anything for you.

I think we disagree.

But you can see it here on the streets: Quite a lot of that happens. If you just walk around the streets, you can see that. Efforts need to be done from both sides, and that’s what I’m saying. You should not cut support for your traditional values; you should extend support.

And extend support for everybody and not just cut?

Exactly. It should not be at the expense of someone. There will always be cases of mismanagement and targeting in certain organizations in culture. That doesn’t mean that you should stop supporting them.

Forgive me, I’m still not 100 percent [about your argument]. I do understand where you’re coming from, but I’m not quite there on the contention that [funding for classical music] has been cut in favor of other projects.

It’s open information: Arts Council budgets for this coming year compared to the previous year, you can see it.

So more NPOs (National Portfolio Organizations) have been awarded generally to a wider range of people but also from all over the country. The way I interpreted it was to divest money from within London to elsewhere, a general opening up and extending diversity in terms of race and region…

Hmm… not quite. 

Whether or not that actually happened is another question. But there was a general push towards diversity in multiple different aspects, in terms of location for example.

But look, even currently, the BBC, they just cut effectively the orchestra, they tried to cut completely the choir, for what were they expanded? There’s a new gospel group organized, that’s true. I’m not saying they should not organize [the gospel group], absolutely fine, but you should not have to cut what you have. It’s like you think that you need to have a sixth finger, and you cut your leg.

You talk about diversity? I’m an immigrant here. I’m officially British, OK, I came from elsewhere. I never was trying to live with my Russian roots. I came here, I adopted the Scouse way of life to a certain extent. And then, when I’m in Great Britain, I try to live as much according to British rules as I can.

But your interpretation of what British values are is constantly shifting. Who is going to be the person who says, “this is this”?

Exactly, I’m saying that, to cast the values is something very difficult, but that has to be done. If you ask, what are the British values of life right now, where will you go?

I mean, they’re in flux, and are being redefined by successive governments. I dunno, I’d hope: tolerance.

Tolerance? It’s not quite a value. This is something that can be qualified everywhere. What defines Great Britain as Great Britain, nowadays? 

I don’t know, you go.

Everyone needs to raise this question. For me, [it’s] heritage of the royal family, these traditional things. (This does not have implementation currently, only a few appearances here and there.) For me, this is politeness and respect of society. It’s not tolerance. Tolerance is a different thing, tolerance is neutral, politeness is… 

Directed. 

It’s politeness and respect. And it’s many small things [too]: real ales, British—English—breakfast, the architecture of London. It’s not just cultural heritage, but that’s how it’s done. 

The way people travel, the way people behave in their homes… (They’re one of the most traveling nations.) There’s separate taps.

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Separate what?

Taps, for water. 

OK. 

In terms of culture, it’s not that I’m against money being given to some diverse projects. It’s that they should be as an expansion, not at the expense of traditional values. 

Look, musicians are so underpaid in this country at the moment. At the moment, musicians and orchestras in the UK seem less paid—versus living costs—than all of Europe probably. It’s definitely less than any neighboring countries. Norway, Iceland, they have better pay. And this is something I think has to be changed. 

It’s one of the greatest British exports: its culture, the orchestras from London. Everybody who’s coming to the concerts, either LSO, LPO, RPO, Philharmonia, somewhere in Europe, they know that that will be the best possible quality. And this is something that will need to be supported. Not just that, but everything else as well.

Will anything change if and when the Labour Party gets in as the next government?

I don’t know, to be honest. To me, it’s not a secret. To me, the main task, for the politicians, will be how to make the majority of the people who are not working currently, work. For the politicians: How to make the system fair to them in a way that they have to work. They have to be part of society and not just sitting at home, waiting for benefits to come. How to do that? I’m not a politician, it’s very difficult to run an economy in that direction. ¶

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Kirsty MacColl’s Voice Was Singular. A New Box Aims to Bring It Wider.

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“Steve took the song home and got Kirsty to sing the woman’s part just to see how it would sound,” said the band’s Spider Stacy. “But as soon as we heard Kirsty singing, we knew she was the answer.”

The song proved a hit on the U.K. charts that winter — on its way to becoming an enduring classic — and saw MacColl return to live performing, guesting with the Pogues in Europe. “The reception she’d get every night was unbelievable,” Stacy said. “She got a real lift from that. It helped get her past her nerves onstage.”

The momentum pushed MacColl to resume her solo career in 1989, with the release of her second album, “Kite,” eight years after her debut. “Kite,” which included a cover of the Kinks’ “Days,” was considered her greatest work — and even won the approval of her most ardent critic, Ewan MacColl. “Kirsty’s father had dismissed her career as being ‘pop,’ in the same way he had dismissed Bob Dylan when he started playing electric guitar,” Lillywhite said. “In fact, when I introduced Kirsty to Dylan at Live Aid, his first words to her were, ‘Wow, your father really hated me.’”

During a playback of the album, the elder MacColl read through the lyrics and finally praised his daughter. “I’m getting quite emotional just thinking about that,” Lillywhite said. “‘Kite’ was really the high point in our lives together.”

Low points soon followed, however, and the couple eventually divorced after more than a decade together. Musically, MacColl went on to incorporate a variety of styles — trip-hop, Latin, even rap — on her next effort, “Electric Landlady” (1991), before delivering a darkly themed breakup record, “Titanic Days” (1993).

Over the next few years, she found further inspiration globally, and brought sounds from South America and Cuba to her self-funded and self-produced swan song, “Tropical Brainstorm,” from 2000. “Much like the way Paul Simon integrated non-European music into his pop vision,” Marr said, “it was a very skillful thing she did.”

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RPO/Lugansky/Petrenko review – orchestra claps packed audience as transformation continues | Classical music

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Two years in, the partnership between the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and its music director Vasily Petrenko continues to be transformational for the RPO. They must be getting the marketing right too: this concert was packed, something rare for the home orchestras since the pandemic, and which moved the players to dole out a mini round of applause for the audience during Petrenko’s introductory speech. The musical director went on to outline briefly the elements of common ground shared by Rachmaninov and Elgar, the two composers on whom the orchestra will be focusing this season, both of them working in the fading glow of an empire’s sunset.

Two warhorse works dominated this first concert of the series. Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto No 2 felt more than usually like a team performance between soloist and conductor, with Petrenko shaping the orchestra to support and spark off Nikolai Lugansky’s detailed playing. From the sombre opening onwards, Lugansky was always forwards in the mix, his playing taut and disciplined, the orchestra weighty yet finely coloured in support, maximising the music’s lushness without making it sound indulgent. Lugansky’s encore was a Rachmaninov Prelude, Op 32 No 12, showing another side to the composer: a few minutes of eerie fairytale shimmer created with playing of cut-glass clarity.

Elgar’s Symphony No 1 similarly showcased the orchestra’s current form, the strings rich and velvety, the wind and brass soloists dovetailing skilfully in Elgar’s endlessly shifting combinations of tone colour. Petrenko’s conducting balanced solidity with lightness, bypassing the bombast and making something especially effective of the moment in the finale when the fierce march tune is transformed into something tender.

The concert had opened with something a century newer than either of these: Lera Auerbach’s Icarus, a 2011 piece Petrenko has previously championed with the National Youth Orchestra. Its driving rhythms came across powerfully, but the most striking aspect was the sci-fi sound of the theremin adding to the ominous heat-haze of the quieter passages.

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‘Earliest known film of the Beatles’ to feature in Peter Jackson-directed music video | Music

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Following his acclaimed documentary Get Back, director Peter Jackson is continuing his relationship with the Beatles by directing his first ever music video for the band’s final song, Now and Then.

It will feature unseen footage of the band, including what Jackson describes as “a few precious seconds of the Beatles performing in their leather suits, the earliest known film of the Beatles and never seen before.”

Now and Then features performances from all four Beatles, including guitar parts recorded by the late George Harrison in 1995, and vocals by John Lennon drawn from a late-70s demo prior to his death in 1980. Jackson was part of the team who used AI-assisted software to isolate Lennon’s vocal from the demo recording, having already used the technology during the making of Get Back to isolate different parts of the recording process for songs that appeared on the Beatles’ final albums Let It Be and Abbey Road.

Jackson has now announced the Now and Then music video, saying the prospect of making it “produced a collection of anxieties almost too overwhelming to deal with. My lifelong love of the Beatles collided into a wall of sheer terror at the thought of letting everyone down. This created intense insecurity in me because I’d never made a music video before, and was not able to imagine how I could even begin to create one for a band that broke up more than 50 years ago, had never actually performed the song, and had half of its members no longer with us. It was going to be far easier to do a runner. I just needed a little time to figure out a good reason for turning the Beatles down.”

In a lengthy statement, Jackson explains that he ended up having plenty of footage to work with, much of it taken in 1995 as Harrison, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr attempted to work up a version of Now and Then that was never completed. Lennon’s son Sean and Harrison’s widow Olivia provided “some great unseen home movie footage” while Pete Best, the Beatles’ original drummer, provided the leather-suited performance footage.

Jackson says he listened to Now and Then over and over in search of inspiration that “would somehow float up from the music. And that began to happen. As I kept listening, it felt like the song was creating ideas and images that started forming in my head – without any conscious effort from me.”

He describes finding “a collection of unseen outtakes in the vault, where the Beatles are relaxed, funny and rather candid. These become the spine of our middle section, and we wove the humour into some footage shot in 2023. The result is pretty nutty and provided the video with much needed balance between the sad and the funny.”

Jackson concludes by saying he has “genuine pride” in the finished video, “and I’ll cherish that for years to come”.

A scene from Get Back.
A scene from Get Back. Photograph: TCD/Prod DB/Alamy

The Jackson-directed Get Back, made up of intimate studio footage as the band work up songs often in real time, was admired on its release in November 2021. Its eight-hour runtime made it a mammoth undertaking for viewers, though, with the Guardian’s Alexis Petridis complaining in a review: “Moments of inspiration and interest are marooned amid acres of desultory chit-chat.”

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Now and Then, meanwhile, is hugely anticipated by Beatles fans, who assumed it would never see the light of day. The 1995 sessions produced two new Beatles songs, Free As a Bird and Real Love – both reached the UK Top 10 on release, and were included on the Anthology compilation series. But Harrison became frustrated by the difficulties of completing Now and Then, and attempts to finish that track were aborted.

Announcing the finished version last week, Olivia Harrison said: “Back in 1995, after several days in the studio working on the track, George felt the technical issues with the demo were insurmountable and concluded that it was not possible to finish the track to a high enough standard. If he were here today, [son] Dhani and I know he would have wholeheartedly joined Paul and Ringo in completing the recording of Now and Then.”

The video for Now and Then will premiere alongside the song at 2pm GMT on Thursday 2 November. The song is being released as a double A-side single, with Love Me Do, the band’s first single, on the other side. Pop artist Ed Ruscha has created the cover art.

A short making-of film about the song, Now and Then – The Last Beatles Song, is airing on Wednesday 1 November from 7.30pm GMT, live on BBC One and on YouTube.

Now and Then is also being included on a reissue of the Beatles compilation album 1967-1970 (known as the The Blue Album), with 1962-1966 (known as The Red Album) also getting a reissue, both on 10 November.

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Taylor Swift Rips Critics Who Shamed Her For ‘Dating Like A Normal Young Woman’

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In liner notes for her latest album, Taylor Swift is addressing critics who scrutinized her love life.

The pop star, whose Friday release of “1989 (Taylor’s Version)” adds to her rerecording journey, wrote that she “decided to completely reinvent” herself at 24 years old before describing how she felt facing comments from the public and media over her relationships.

“The voices that had begun to shame me in new ways for dating like a normal young woman? I wanted to silence them,” Swift wrote.

“You see — in the years preceding this, I had become the target of slut shaming — the intensity and relentlessness of which would be criticized and called out if it happened today. The jokes about my amount of boyfriends. The trivialization of my songwriting as if it were a predatory act of a boy crazy psychopath. The media co-signing of this narrative. I had to make it stop because it was starting to really hurt.”

Swift, who typically keeps mum on her relationships in public, has previously taken aim at detractors for going after her romantic pursuits and her songwriting.

She told Rolling Stone in 2014 that people “watching my dating life has become a bit of a national pastime.”

“I don’t like seeing slide shows of guys I’ve apparently dated. I don’t like giving comedians the opportunity to make jokes about me at awards shows. I don’t like it when headlines read ‘Careful, Bro, She’ll Write a Song About You,’ because it trivializes my work,” she said at the time.

“And most of all, I don’t like how all these factors add up to build the pressure so high in a new relationship that it gets snuffed out before it even has a chance to start. And so ... I just don’t date.”

In this week’s liner notes, Swift wrote that she swore off doing “anything that could be weaponized against me by a culture that claimed to believe in liberating women but consistently treated me with the harsh moral codes of the Victorian Era.”

She then seemed to address her famous “squad” of female friends, a grouping that has previously led fans to speculate that she could be queer. (Swift has never stated that she is.)

“If I only hung out with my female friends, people couldn’t sensationalize or sexualize that — right?” the singer wrote. “I would learn later on that people could and people would.”

She added that “everyone had something to say” about her behavior and acknowledged that “they always will” before referencing one of her most famous tunes.

“I learned lessons, paid prices, and tried to ... don’t say it ... don’t say it ... I’m sorry, I have to say it ... shake it off,” she wrote.



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Spotify Reportedly Plans To Pay Even Less In Royalties To Less-Popular Artists

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Spotify, already notorious for its insultingly low royalty rate, is reportedly planning to pay even less to artists who don’t already get a ton of streams. Billboard reports that the giant Swedish streaming service is restructuring its royalty system and that it “will de-monetize tracks that had previously received 0.5% of Spotify’s royalty pool.” Presumably, Spotify will frame this as a way to combat fraud and to limit payments to ambient-noise generators, but it could also have a tremendous effect on the service’s role within the independent music world. (more…)

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Philharmonia/Bancroft review – fearless and fiery Copland is a dark heart of US programme | Classical music

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Large claims have been made down the years on behalf of Aaron Copland’s third symphony, written at the end of the second world war. But significant questions have also been asked, including by Copland champion Leonard Bernstein, who nevertheless made two recordings of it. Ryan Bancroft’s high energy account of the symphony, the centrepiece of the latest concert in the Philharmonia Orchestra’s autumn Let Freedom Ring season of American music, did not quite resolve the puzzle.

Serge Koussevitzky, who conducted the 1946 premiere, called Copland’s third the greatest US symphony ever written. It unquestionably gives voice to an optimistic postwar American spirit that chimed with the composer’s left wing New Deal politics and aesthetic. The finale, crafted around Copland’s then little known Fanfare for the Common Man, helped secure its place in the repertoire.

But the symphony’s size and the brashness of some of the orchestral writing, not least in the finale, have an uncomfortably bombastic side. Bancroft’s reading, fearless and fiery, tried to push such doubts to one side, and came close to succeeding. But it is hard to shake off the feeling that Copland is stretching his voice too far. The darker mood of 21st-century America makes the third a fascinating period piece, but no longer the work of our times that it once seemed.

Samuel Barber’s violin concerto of 1939, by contrast, has achieved an established place in the repertoire over the same decades. Apparently playing on the same Guarneri instrument with which Isaac Stern made the landmark recording under Bernstein in the 1960s, Renaud Capuçon proved himself a five-star successor to Stern. Capuçon had all the expressive tonal warmth and legato for the first two movements and all the brilliantly fast-fingered technique required for the hair-raising presto finale.

Caroline Shaw’s Entr’acte for string orchestra, written in 2011, which began the concert, offered uncomplicated delight. Ironic and unpredictable, it starts in tidy neoclassical vein before the harmonies and forms are dissolved and deconstructed into an extended pizzicato cello solo, played with theatrical wit by Karen Stephenson.

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John Lennon’s murder to be explored in forthcoming TV docuseries | John Lennon

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The 1980 murder of John Lennon and the investigation of his killer Mark David Chapman are to be the subject of a new three-part series narrated by Kiefer Sutherland.

Apple TV+ described John Lennon: Murder Without a Trial as “the most thoroughly researched examination of John Lennon’s 1980 murder, which shocked and saddened the world”.

Lennon was murdered in December 1980 in the archway of the Dakota, his residence in New York City. Chapman, who shot five hollow-point bullets from a .38 special revolver, confessed to killing Lennon. He was sentenced to between 20 years and life in prison.

Mark David Chapman photographed the day after he shot John Lennon.
Mark David Chapman photographed the day after he shot John Lennon. Photograph: PA

The series will include previously unseen footage, including eyewitness accounts and crime scene photography, as well as interviews with Chapman’s psychiatrists, lawyers, detectives, and prosecutors – alongside accounts of some of those close to Lennon.

Apple TV+ said that the team behind the documentary were given “extensive Freedom of Information Act requests from the New York City Police Department, the Board of Parole, and the District Attorney’s office” while making the series.

Yoko Ono, Lennon’s widow, has not commented on the documentary. It is not clear whether she participated in its making. The Guardian has contacted her representatives.

Chapman traveled from Hawaii to New York on 8 December to murder Lennon. Earlier that day, he spotted the Beatles star and asked him to sign a copy of Double Fantasy, the new album by Lennon and Ono.

During his parole hearings, Chapman admitted to feeling conflicted about committing the murder on the day. “It wasn’t all totally cold-blooded, but most of it was. I did try to tell myself to leave. I’ve got the album, take it home, show my wife, everything will be fine,” Chapman said in 2012. “But I was so compelled to commit that murder that nothing would have dragged me away from that building.”

In 2022, Chapman was denied parole for the 12th time. It has been reported that Ono, who was with Lennon on the day of his death at a photoshoot for Rolling Stone magazine, frequently requests for Chapman to remain in prison. Chapman is entitled to another parole review in 2024.

Currently, the docuseries has no confirmed release date.

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Jason Isbell Spills On Awkward Near Encounter With Ivanka Trump At A Music Festival

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Jason Isbell wasn’t feeling an impromptu meet and greet with Ivanka Trump after he spotted the former president’s daughter at a music festival last year.

“Goofy cowgirl clothes. Thank God a storm came up and she left before we went on,” Isbell wrote on X, formerly Twitter, about Ivanka Trump. “She walked toward me backstage- I turned and walked away. Some artists were VERY friendly with her though. We saw that.”

Isbell’s post was a reply to The New York Times’ Annie Karni, who shared her story on Ivanka Trump attending Kim Kardashian’s birthday party over the weekend.

Kardashian, in an Instagram carousel post, wrote that she was “blessed to have hit the jackpot of friends” and tagged Ivanka Trump in one image.

Days after the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection, Isbell also shared that he’s “grateful for a whole lot of things, but my mom and dad still being alive and not being Trumpers is high on that damn list.”



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THE SCOOP | New Opera Passport By OPERA America Is For Lovers Of Opera And Travel

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Tapestry Opera’s Rocking Horse Winner (Photo: Dahlia Katz)

OPERA AMERICA has announced a new initiative, Opera Passport by OPERA America, designed for those who love both opera and travel throughout North America.

Toronto’s Tapestry Opera is a member of the innovative programme that is being called a discount exchange. If you subscribe to one of the member organizations, your reach now extends to 85 opera companies across the continent.

Inspired by similar membership programmes between museums and some theatre companies in the United States, the goal is to help all member organizations build awareness as well as audiences.

The Numbers

Research commissioned by OPERA America paints a picture of the state of opera in the US, and it’s likely the numbers in Canada are similar. They found:

  • Average 2022‒2023 ticket sales for opera companies were 22% below pre-pandemic 2018‒2019 levels;
  • At the same time, an average of almost 1/3 of all audiences were attending an opera for the first time.

It represents a realistic opportunity, as well as a challenge — audience building depends on returning opera lovers as well as finding new ones.

“Opera Passport by OPERA America encourages audiences to experience opera beyond their hometown,” said Marc A. Scorca, president and CEO of OPERA America, in a statement.

“We’re excited to forge new connections between companies and facilitate affordable access to opera across North America. In this moment of regrowth for the sector, the collaborative spirit of this new initiative — uniting companies large and small, urban and rural — demonstrates our collective role in cultivating the audiences of today and tomorrow.”

The Opera Passport

Along with Tapestry Opera, Canadian companies include Calgary Opera, Manitoba Opera, Pacific Opera Victoria, Newfoundland’s Opera on the Avalon, and Vancouver Opera. You can check out Tapestry Opera’s new season announcement in our recent Preview [HERE].

On the US side of the border, there is a long list of participating opera companies from both small and large communities, from Anchorage Opera in Alaska to Ars Lyrica Houston, Boston Lyric Opera, Detroit Opera, LA Opera, Opera Philadelphia, and Hawai’i Opera Theatre.

A full list of participating companies is available [HERE].

Membership, as the slogan goes, has its benefits.

  • 10% minimum discounts off tickets at all participating opera companies across North America;
  • Available to subscribers and donors at the participating opera companies (some conditions may apply, as determined by each company individually) and to individual members of OPERA America.

If you’re not a member of OPERA America, subscribers can contact their hometown opera company to learn about how to take part in the programme.

Opera companies who are members of OPERA America can still join the programme. To learn more and enrol, company representatives can contact OPERA America at Marketing@operaamerica.org.

What better way to celebrate World Opera Day on October 25?

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María José Llergo’s Songs Have Flamenco Roots. They Raise a Ruckus.

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When the Spanish singer María José Llergo talks about flamenco, it often sounds as though she is describing something springing from beneath her feet. “The genre is rooted in my land,” she said, in a video call from her place just outside Madrid. “It’s in our roots.”

Growing up in rural Andalusia, where flamenco was born, Llergo first became interested in music while watching her grandfather work on his farm. “I remember him raking the earth, watering the plants and singing — everything from tangos to boleros,” she said, speaking in Spanish. Life for him wasn’t exactly easy back then. “My grandparents come from very humble — albeit very happy — origins,” said Llergo, surrounded by family portraits. She comes from that world too.

Llergo, now 29, has developed a voice and singing style of her own, but she’s intent on keeping regional traditions alive. Infusing electronica and R&B with traditional Andalusian influences — including flamenco snaps and the off-kilter melodies of cante jondo, a guttural singing style common to folk music in the south of Spain — Llergo’s 2020 EP “Sanación” is a testament to the versatility of flamenco as a genre. “Ultrabelleza,” her debut album out Friday, takes this experiment a step further.

The record’s lead single, “Rueda, Rueda,” begins with a chant and handclaps before a sprawling pop chorus arrives. On tracks like “Visión y Reflejo,” Llergo even tries her hand at rapping. “María had never done it before,” the Spanish indie singer Zahara, who was one of the album’s main producers, said in a video call. “But she managed to do it in one take when we were recording the song. It was super impressive.”

Llergo said she knows she isn’t the first person to traverse genres — and she’s not just talking about the Catalan pop star Rosalía, whose debut album, “El Mal Querer,” is often credited with catapulting flamenco onto the global stage. (Incidentally, she and Llergo both studied at the Escola Superior de Música de Catalunya in Barcelona under the same mentor, José Miguel Vizcay.)

“Flamenco has always lent itself to other styles. All you have to do to find proof of that is look back at people like Lola Flores and Camarón,” Llergo said, referring to Camarón de la Isla, the singer often credited as the 20th century’s “god” of flamenco. “It’s always been global.”

During the 1970s and ’80s, Camarón de la Isla, a Romani from Cádiz whose stage name is Spanish for “shrimp,” breathed new life into flamenco by adding instruments not traditionally found in the genre, such as the drums and bass guitar, to his recordings. His heartfelt lyrics and acrobatic vocal range would also eventually earn him a reputation as one of the country’s top crooners: In his best-known song, “Como el Água,” he compares the strength of his love for someone to a river running through the sierra.

Llergo tends to speak in that language, too, drawing from the rich natural landscapes of southern Spain to tell stories about herself, her hometown and the people in it. “I run through your body like water runs through a river,” she sings in the synth-heavy “Juramento,” in a nod to her predecessor.

While “Juramento” and other songs on the record don’t necessarily sound like flamenco, Llergo knows there are different ways artists can pay homage to the genre. Drawing clear demarcations around who or what fits into it isn’t one of them. “It’s flamenco’s ability to mix into other genres that makes it more appealing on a global level,” she said.

From the plucky guitar riffs on Madonna’s 1987 hit “La Isla Bonita” to the handclaps, or palmas, on Caroline Polachek’s “Sunset” from earlier this year, there’s a long history of American pop artists’ experimenting with flamenco. As the market becomes friendlier to Spanish-language pop, listeners might find themselves looking for more of the genre.

“Folk music in general — take regional Mexican music, for example — is becoming increasingly popular,” said Manuel Jubera, Llergo’s A&R at Sony Music Spain, in a recent phone interview. “So it’s a good moment for flamenco to export itself.” Next year Llergo will bring her music directly to the United States with a show at the Luckman Fine Arts Complex in Los Angeles in March and one at Le Poisson Rouge in New York the following week.

“I remember the first time I went to New York, I couldn’t stop crying and taking videos on my phone,” she said. “I still think about the way the sun reflects on the buildings there.” (When she’s on the road, she misses home, though. She beckoned her 1-year-old Chihuahua, Torres, to show him off on camera, but he was nowhere to be found.)

When Llergo was in New York, she found herself reflecting on the culture of her homeland. “I thought about Federico García Lorca a lot,” she said, referring to his book, “Poet in New York,” written during a 10-month stint in the city in 1929.

Like Llergo, García Lorca came from Andalusia. “And do you know what the street I grew up in in Pozoblanco is called?” she asked, looking straight at the camera, her eyebrows rising. “Federico García Lorca.”

These types of connections — including ones between America and Spain — are often on her mind. “Flamenco is like the blues,” she said. It originated in Andalusia’s marginalized Roma communities. “The lyrics tell stories of survival — it’s always been a way for the most oppressed to escape.” Llergo, who said she faced discrimination at school because of her lower-class background, still finds solace in them.

Like many people, she also appreciates the communal nature of flamenco, an idea grounded in the concept of el jaleo, roughly “hell-raising” or causing a ruckus, which refers to the audience’s hand-clapping, foot-stomping shouts of encouragement during a performance.

Over the years, a number of people have encouraged Llergo to raise hell too, and when she looks to the future, she can’t help but feel grateful for them. “It’s crazy,” she said. “To think that when my grandfather was watering the plants in his field, he was also nurturing me.”

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Kronos Quartet: Five Decades review – virtuosic quartet celebrate with djembe, eggplant and Hendrix | Classical music

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This remarkable San Francisco collective have now been reinventing the string quartet for 50 years, playing everything from Argentine tango to Azerbaijani folk, from Thelonious Monk to Asha Bhosle, and collaborating with everyone from David Bowie to Allen Ginsberg. You’d expect a weighty retrospective for this golden jubilee – and a 10-minute opening film races through old footage from their career, including a slot on Sesame Street – but this was a largely forward-facing programme.

Kronos have commissioned more than 1,000 new pieces over the years, and this show features some older ones: a 1999 work by Steve Reich in which they perform over a recording of themselves; a 1992 piece by Zimbabwean composer Dumisani Maraire featuring Yahael Camara Onono on djembe; a version of a 1970 George Crumb composition where three band members use their bows to play wine glasses; and a 2018 commission by Bay Area musician Zachary James Watkins where they underscore Martin Luther King’s incredibly powerful letter from Birmingham jail, read by his lawyer Clarence Jones.

Playing wine glasses for part of George Crumb’s Black Angel: (l to r) David Harrington, John Sherba and Hank Dutt with Paul Wiancko: cello.
Playing wine glasses for part of George Crumb’s Black Angel: (l to r) David Harrington, John Sherba and Hank Dutt with Paul Wiancko on cello. Photograph: Mark Allan

They also draw from Fifty for the Future, featuring 50 new commissions from composers around the world, the sheet music of which you can download for free from the Kronos website. There is a beautiful miniature by the Indonesian composer Peni Candra Rini, who sings the lead line in unison with Harrington and a charming staccato piece by Terry Riley called Lunch in Chinatown, where the band shout out things that Riley says during lunch meetings (“this eggplant is delicious!”). Best of all is Little Black Book by electronic musician Jlin Patton, a Bernard Herrmann-like horror-movie score arranged by jazz trombonist Jacob Garchik, where cellist Paul Wiancko doubles up on bass drum.

After a deserved standing ovation, the encore is their famous version of Jimi Hendrix’s Purple Haze. What sounds like a freak-out is actually a study in precision: Steve Riffkin’s arrangement meticulously incorporates all of the harmonics and glitches from the original, adding tons of rubato. It’s something you notice about so much of tonight’s programme – from an arrangement of a Mahalia Jackson spiritual to a 1940s Mexican folk song, Kronos never complicate their melodies: these are four stunning virtuosos who know the power of restraint.

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Emma Anderson: Pearlies review – intriguing and subtle reinvention | Pop and rock

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During the 1990s, Lush were prominent figures in first shoegaze and later Britpop, but never quite converted critical acclaim into massive commercial success. After a reunion fizzled out in 2016, co-frontwoman (alongside Miki Berenyi) Emma Anderson carried on working on some of the songs that she had planned to share and develop with her bandmates. The result is her debut solo album.

However, whereas Anderson’s work in Lush – and, indeed, her later Sing-Sing project – was very much guitar-centred, Pearlies is firmly rooted in electronic pop (although Suede’s Richard Oakes does contribute guitar on four tracks). It makes for an intriguing listen: her songwriting style is clearly recognisable, but thanks in part to producer James Chapman, the execution sounds more like Goldfrapp at their most dreamlike. It’s not an immediate listen, but the subtle melodies that abound in the likes of Bend the Round, the hypnotic Clusters and the more folk-inflected Willow and Mallow work their magic on repeated plays. It’s a successful enough reinvention for Anderson surely to be wondering why she didn’t make a solo record sooner.

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