Showing posts with label Nigel Kennedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nigel Kennedy. Show all posts

Thursday, July 4, 2019

Nigel Kennedy - His Music and His Life

Nigel Kennedy

Thursday, February 23, 2017

Love Classical at the Royal Albert Hall

Love Classical at the Royal Albert Hall

Love Classical at the Royal Albert Hall
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Get your tickets for this 12-day festival of classical events, including performances from Alison Balsom, Nigel Kennedy and Lang Lang.
Love Classical is a 12-day festival of classical music-themed events taking place across seven different spaces around London’s Royal Albert Hall, from the iconic auditorium to deep underground in the Loading Bay. 

Big acts confirmed to play include violinist Nigel Kennedy, pianist Lang Lang and trumpeter Alison Balsom with special guests Bryn Terfel, Guy Barker and David Goode.

The festival kicks off on Saturday 4 March with the London Contemporary Orchestra gig, and finishes with Lang Lang’s second headline show on Wednesday 15 March. There are also opportunities to hear Catrin Finch, Gary Ryan and view a free photography exhibition.  Innovations at the festival include the chance to compose a piece for one-handed pianist Nicholas McCarthy to perform at his Elgar Room show and the opportunity to pit your wits against fellow fans at the Classical Quiz on Sunday 12 March.

Click here to get your tickets for this innovative and spectacular festival.
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Friday, September 5, 2014

How Nigel Kennedy Changed Classical Music Forever

If it wasn't for a spiky-haired Nigel Kennedy’s 1989 recording of Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons, you and I might not be listening to Classic FM today. Here's why I think one album changed the classical world forever. 

Nigel kennedy violinist four seasons

It's a bold statement, I know, but think about this: in 1989, the classical world was marking the end of an era with the death of Herbert von Karajan. Then Kennedy burst onto the scene and launched a new one. He was the polar opposite to every expectation we had of classical musicians: scruffy, cheeky, spiky-haired, foot-stamping, ‘Mockney’ speaking; he called us ‘cats’ and ‘monsters’!

Agreed, The Four Seasons  was the first time that a classical artist had been given the full pop marketing treatment. There was a promotional ‘single’, billboard posters, TV and radio commercials. But there was more to this phenomenon than marketing - Kennedy is a brilliant violinist and performer.

His full throttle version of Vivaldi sold more than three million copies worldwide, held onto the No.1 spot in the classical chart for more than a year, and entered the record books as the best-selling classical recording ever.

I'd spent my youth playing in bands and I vividly recall hearing Kennedy's album for the first time and thinking 'This guy knows how to let rip!' I'd never heard baroque that sounded like rock before - and Kennedy looked the part too. If you need a reminder, join me on Classic FM Drive  after 6pm to hear a track from the classic recording. 

And I'd say that Classic FM, launched three years later, probably would not have had such a phenomenal launch and success if it weren’t for Kennedy. He, along with the arrival of the Three Tenors the following year, demystified classical music, showing that it wasn’t just for a knowledgeable elite. He didn’t dumb it down and he didn’t ‘cross-over’, he just put it out there. And in doing so he laid the foundations for the next 25 years and a public who had been awakened to the joy of classical music.

(C) 2014 by ClassicFM