As the adoption of AI and Generative AI continues to transform business, IT operations teams, data scientists and engineers, and creative teams face mounting complexity in deploying and managing ...
A small, slender man, Maurice Ravel was never an imposing presence, but he certainly cut a striking figure: a famously natty dresser, he was always meticulously groomed and impeccably turned out. Once ...
Perfection, c’est travail, said Maurice Ravel. Pride in his own small and perfectly formed achievement, and a conviction that perfection is a supreme quality of art, lie behind those three words. But ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Critic’s Notebook Ravel’s depiction of an enchanted garden is so simple and wistful, I never want it to end. Critic’s Notebook Ravel’s depiction of an enchanted garden is so ...
Boléro has attracted interpreters ranging from Pierre Boulez to James Last. Philip Clark seeks out the finest moments of an 80-year recording history I don’t know about you, but I love losing myself ...
Ravel channelled the Baroque milieu of François Couperin through a 20th-century lens in his six-movement piano suite. Jed Distler surveys a century of recordings Composed between 1914 and 1917, ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Notebook Performing in New York, Seong-Jin Cho presented a marathon survey of Ravel’s solo piano works and appeared in Prokofiev’s Second ...
From the classical archive, 22 October 1928: a review of a performance in London by the composer and pianist who ‘transcends his limitations’ London, Sunday Mr Gordon Bryan was fortunate in having ...
Ivan Hewett is The Telegraph’s Classical Music Critic and an author whose works include Music: Healing The Rift, a personal history of modern music. He has been involved in music as a composer, ...
The artist’s self-image is often defined by opposition. That opposition can take the form of censorship, or perhaps a rival master. Art enthusiasts may think of the rivalries between Ghiberti and ...