Live choice
Paul Riley picks the month’s best concert and opera highlights in the UK
York Early Music Christmas Festival
York, 3-11 December
Web: ncem.co.uk
For nearly a quarter of a century, York’s seasonal festival has signalled the countdown to Christmas. Prisma dive into the world of the seicento, Siglo de Oro heads to Mexico, cornetto and violin are challenged to a pan-european duel, and 2021 ends in a blaze of Bachian glory with the B minor Mass performed by The Yorkshire Bach Choir and Baroque Soloists.
Gothic Voices
Stoller Hall,
Manchester, 3 December
Web: stollerhall.com
Sharing its yuletide bounty between Manchester and London’s Wigmore Hall, the vocal quartet observes a medieval
Christmas. Gregorian chant is threaded through a programme featuring Mass movements by Queldryk and Leonel Power, motets by Dunstable and Walter Frye and a generous helping of ‘Anon’.
London Philharmonic Orchestra & Choir
Royal Festival Hall,
London, 4 December
Web: lpo.org.uk
As his St John and St Luke Passions suggest, James Macmillan isn’t daunted by the shadow of JS Bach. Now comes a Christmas Oratorio (drawing on Latin liturgical texts, 16thand 17th-century poetry and a Scottish lullaby) to extend the overlap. The UK premiere is conducted by Mark Elder, with soloists soprano Lucy Crowe and baritone Roderick Williams.
Royal Scottish National Orchestra
Royal Concert Hall,
Glasgow, 4 December
Web: glasgowconcerthalls.com
From Howard Blake’s The Snowman to Handel’s Messiah conducted by Christian Curnyn, the orchestra is awash with Christmas spirit. And it all starts early in the month with conductor Elim Chan, who unwraps some choice delights from Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker alongside glittering Ravel.
The Sixteen
St David’s Hall,
Cardiff, 5 December
Web: thesixteen.com
Bob Chilcott’s sequence of seven Advent Antiphons supplies the focus for the choir’s minipilgrimage to five venues. Traditional fare rubs shoulders with Advent music by Victoria and Guerrero, and Magnificat settings by Arvo Pärt and, again, Victoria.
Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra
Dome Concert Hall,
Brighton, 5 December
Web: brightonphil.org.uk
Pianist Joanna Macgregor, the orchestra’s incoming music director, has already put her own stamp on it. ‘A Celtic Christmas’ invites accordionist and clog dancer Amy Thatcher plus piper Kathryn Tickell (see right) for a seasonal bran tub containing folk-inspired works by James Macmillan and Vaughan Williams.
Ex Cathedra
Town Hall,
Birmingham, 5 December
Web: excathedra.co.uk
Among a dozen concerts in its ‘Christmas Music by Candlelight’ series, Jeffrey Skidmore’s choir side-steps into Advent Bach: the cantatas Wachet auf and
Nun komm der Heiden Heiland. Setting texts by Kurt Masur and Greta Thunberg, there’s also Liz Dilnot Johnson’s 2019 cantata
I stand at the door.
Orchestra of the Swan
Playhouse, Stratford-upon-avon, 7 December
Web: orchestraoftheswan.org Directed by violinist David Le Page, the orchestra teams up with female vocal quintet Papagena and narrator David Acton for ‘The Twelve Tales of Christmas’, a seasonal selection box of words and music including excerpts from Dickens, TS Eliot, CS Lewis and Dylan Thomas.
Joglaresa
Christchurch,
Grantham, 8 December
Web: joglaresa.com
The early music ensemble brings its voices, fidel, harp, bells and bagpipes to bear on ‘Lullay Myn Lykynge’ – a festive adventure on the Celtic fringes of Europe including a silvery take on In
Dulci Jubilo and the plaintive Irish carol Don Oíche Úd im Beithil.
Christmas at Glyndebourne
Lewes, 8-12 December
Web: glyndebourne.com
The Autumn tour behind them, the chorus and tour orchestra take centre stage with a fourconcert cornucopia of opera highlights and yuletide classics. They’re wrapped around a single performance (on 10 December) of Handel’s Messiah, conducted by Aidan Oliver.
St John’s Smith Square Christmas Festival
St John’s Smith Square, London, 10-23 December
Web: sjss.org.uk
Christmas isn’t a time for tinkering with the tried and tested. In its 36th incarnation, the Christmas Festival at St John’s ends with artistic director Stephen Layton conducting his choir Polyphony in a performance of Handel’s Messiah. The night before, he tackles four cantatas from Bach’s Christmas Oratorio with the Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge. And in a Marian slant, the Tallis Scholars splice
Stravinsky and Arvo Pärt with Guerrero and Isaac.
Monteverdi Choir
St Martin-in-the-fields, London, 11 December
Web: monteverdi.co.uk
John Eliot Gardiner’s Monteverdi forces settle into their first ever UK home with a performance of Berlioz’s L’enfance du Christ. The period instruments of the Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique are in attendance.
Orchestra of St John’s
Dorchester Abbey, 11 December Web: osj.org.uk
The orchestra will bring Viennoiserie to the Oxfordshire Abbey Church on New Year’s Eve, but before that, on 18 December, the annual performance of Handel’s Messiah. Launching the festivities here is Britten’s A Ceremony of Carols, with harpist Elizabeth Bass and the OSJ Oxford Voices.
The Gesualdo Six
Kings Place,
London, 12 December
Web: kingsplace.co.uk
‘In Winter’s House’ is a concert that includes Joanna Marsh’s eponymous work originally written for the vocal group Tenebrae. Owain Park directs a programme with ‘ancient and modern’ as its watchword. Michael Praetorius complements Jonathan Harvey, and Tallis’s Videte miraculum prefaces a serene miniature by Cheryl Frances-hoad.
Sestina
Ulster Museum,
Belfast, 16, 17 December
Web: sestinamusic.com
Sestina might be associated with the music of the Baroque and earlier, but not exclusively so. Christmas means ‘Carols at the Museum’, and alongside music by Johann Hermann Schein and Francis Poulenc, there’s also the premiere of a new commission from Eoghan Desmond.
Stile Antico
Colyer-fergusson Hall, Canterbury, 17 December
Web: stileantico.co.uk
The 12-voice early music ensemble navigates a musical retelling of the nativity story through the lens of Renaissance composers such as Byrd and Tallis, Victoria and Josquin. They sign off with John Sheppard’s great Christmas respond, Verbum caro factum est.
Christmas Weekend
Snape Maltings, 17-19 December Web: brittenpearsarts.org
Music is at the heart of Snape’s festive weekend, with stars in the East ranging from Tenebrae’s account of Messiah with the Academy of Ancient Music to an evening of songs and carols with Bryn Terfel and friends.
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment
St George’s Bristol, 19 December Web: stgeorgesbristol.co.uk
There are excerpts from Messiah and Corelli’s evergreen Christmas Concerto, plus JS Bach too. But the OAE’S Baroque Christmas, directed by Steven Devine, also strikes out on the road less travelled with music by Buxtehude, Schütz, Charpentier and Praetorius.
Hallé Orchestra
Bridgewater Hall, Manchester, 22, 23 December
Web: bridgewater-hall.co.uk
The Hallé screens The Snowman complete with Howard Blake’s score conducted by Ben Palmer. First, Lynley Dodd’s irrepressible creation Hairy Maclary (from Donaldson’s Dairy) meets the orchestra in three special stories with music by Tom Redmond.
Siglo de Oro
Wigmore Hall,
London, 31 December
Web: wigmore-hall.org.uk
Wigmore Hall might not advertise a Christmas early music festival, but how else to characterise the choice ‘season’s greetings’ from Gothic Voices, the Gabrieli Consort, Vox Luminis, the Dunedin Consort, Solomon’s Knot and Arcangelo? On New Year’s Eve, Siglo de Oro is bound for the New World and a Christmas in Pueblo anchored by Padilla’s Missa Joseph fili David.