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Chucho Valdés

By John Shakespeare Dyson | September 17, 2025

Where are the songs of summer? Aye, where are they now? Well, they are stored in our memories, where they will hopefully allow us to fondly replay them in our minds as a respite from winter gloom. For me, one of the most memorable of this summer’s musical experiences was...

Kınalıada

By John Shakespeare Dyson | September 4, 2025


Kınalıada, the smallest of the four main Princes’ Islands in the Sea of Marmara, is a place that until this summer, despite my 48-year residence in the city, I had never visited. Accordingly, when I saw in the programme for this year’s İKSV Istanbul Music Festival that a concert was...

Strings in Love and Endless Paths

Mystical music at the İKSV Istanbul Music Festival

By John Shakespeare Dyson | July 17, 2025


It was a great privilege to be on the Fıstıklı Terrace of the Sakıp Sabancı Museum in Emirgan once again, this time to listen to a concert of pieces performed on traditional Turkish and Azeri instruments. Tellerin Aşkı (‘Strings in Love’), an event that took place on June 23, was...

Shining stars

By John Shakespeare Dyson | July 3, 2025


On June 21 I went to the Süreyya Opera House in Kadıköy for a concert – part of the 2025 İKSV Istanbul Music Festival. Entitled Female Stars of Tomorrow (Yarının Kadın Yıldızları), it showcased the talents of 13 young female musicians who have enjoyed the financial support of the Industrial...

Glière in the limelight

Reinhold Gliere's Horn Concerto is a revelation at the CRR

By John Shakespeare Dyson | June 18, 2025


Reinhold Glière, a composer who had not previously crossed my radar, proved to be something of a discovery when the CRR Orchestra, conducted by Carlo Tenan, accompanied the Turkish horn-player Can Kiracı in his Horn Concerto in B flat major at the Cemal Reşit Rey Concert Hall on May 9....

The off!

The opening concert of the 2025 Istanbul Music Festival

By John Shakespeare Dyson | June 13, 2025


Wednesday saw the opening concert of the 2025 İKSV Istanbul Music Festival, which this year, the 53rd, has taken the theme, ‘Beyond Borders’. (Photo: the Tekfen Philharmonic Orchestra, by Salih Üstündağ). After the speeches, the lucky recipients of this year's awards were announced. First up was the young Turkish violinist Bade Daştan...

Istanbul Music Festival Highlights 2025

By John Shakespeare Dyson | June 9, 2025


This year’s İKSV Istanbul Music Festival, the 53rd in the series, is scheduled to run from June 11 to 26. Organised by the  Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts (İstanbul Kültür Sanat Vakfı or ‘İKSV’) and centred around the theme of ‘Beyond Borders’, the 25 concerts feature more than 45...

Remembering Ayten Alpman

By John Shakespeare Dyson | June 5, 2025


On April 18 I made my way to the Cemal Reşit Rey Concert Hall for a tribute event commemorating the jazz and pop singer Ayten Alpman (1930-2012) (image source: Ayten Alpman’ı anıyoruz! Kadıköy Life). Ms Alpman’s singing career began in the early 1950s, when she was encouraged to sing jazz by the...

Putting Constantinople on the map: the great Olympia extravaganza

By Cornucopia Connoisseur | May 25, 2025


On Boxing Day 1893, 32,251 travellers descended on Constantinople, not Istanbul’s historical peninsula, but rather a colossal replica of the city, constructed under the vast glass-and-iron canopy of Olympia in West London. For a multitude unlikely to make the journey across Europe, Constantinople in London represented the real thing. Passengers...

Beyond precocious

A tour de force from Alexander Malofeev

By John Shakespeare Dyson | May 19, 2025


On April 14 I went to the Cemal Reşit Rey Concert Hall to attend a recital by the young Russian pianist Alexander Malofeev. Born in 2001 and currently resident in Berlin, he first came to prominence when he won the piano category of the 8th International Tchaikovsky Competition for Young...
Posted in Music & Performing Arts, - Classical Music, - Musical Shares

Celebrating Anatolia’s astonishing flora

An exhibition that captures the plant diversity of Anatolia through botanical illustration

By Harriet Rix | May 10, 2025


A new exhibition of botanical art is arrived at Salt Beyoğlu, Istanbul on May 15 and will run to August 10, 2025, with a day of events on May 18. The exhibition (part of Botanical Art Worldwide 2025) will bring together 80 original works by 47 artists, all of which...

The Orient restrained

The Spring Islamic Week is in full swing this week. Here are some of the highlights...

By Cornucopia Connoisseur | April 27, 2025


Both Sotheby’s and Christie’s hold Islaimic and Indian art sales this week. And Sotheby's is also holding its Orientialist Art sale plus an important single-collection sale of watercolours by David Roberts, RA. Bonhams in Bond Street holds its Islamic and Indian sale on May 23. If the mood is a...

Seductive sonority

By John Shakespeare Dyson | April 15, 2025


On March 13 I made my way to the Notre Dame de Sion French Lycée in Harbiye for yet another musical event put on by the school. This time the performer was Denis Pascal, a pianist who is the father of Aurélien Pascal, the cellist who played İlyas Mirzayev’s Cello...

A gem of purest ray serene

‘The Borusan Quartet’s performance was as near faultless as one has the right to expect of an assemblage of human beings’

By John Shakespeare Dyson | March 30, 2025

On February 18 I made my way to the ENKA compound on Katar Caddesi, the road that descends the hill from Maslak (north of Levent) towards İstinye (on the Bosphorus) in order to attend a concert by the Borusan String Quartet and pianist Özgür Aydın. I have to admit that...

From misty Wales to a high Victorian salon in Istanbul

Looking back on Istanbul's spectacular harp festival

By John Shakespeare Dyson | March 11, 2025


The 2nd Ceren Necipoğlu Istanbul International Harp Festival was held from 14th to 19th January 2025 with the participation of three internationally-acclaimed lady harpists: Sioned Williams, a former principal harpist of the BBC Symphony Orchestra who is now an Honorary Research Fellow at the Royal Academy of Music; Florence Sitruk,...

The extraordinary career of İlyas Mirzayev

By John Shakespeare Dyson | February 14, 2025


On January 11 2025 I attended a Coffee Concert at the Atatürk Cultural Centre in Taksim. These concerts take place on Saturday mornings in the downstairs foyer – where concertgoers go for refreshments. Fortunately, the space on this floor of the AKM is big enough to accommodate a stage and...

How the year began

By Alexandra de Cramer | February 10, 2025


Öktem Aykut Gallery Toygun Özdemir Unforced Errors, Coincidences and Lost Years January 10, 2025 – February 08, 2025 Unforced Errors, Coincidences and Lost Years marked Toygun Özdemir’s fifth solo exhibition at Öktem Aykut Gallery, featuring a carefully curated collection of 22 works created over the past three years. This series...

The poetry of bathing

Barbarossa's 1540s baths – the Cinili Hamam in Istanbul's Zeyrek district – opens with a flourish

By Alexandra de Cramer photography by Monica Fritz | February 1, 2025


This tile panel was originally located in the men’s hot room. The eight rectangular tiles are adorned with Persian couplets in nasta‘līq script from a poem highlighting the hamam's significance in Ottoman literary tradition. Poets such as Nâbî, Fuzulî and Nedîm were all inspired by the vibrant social and aesthetic...

Roll over Bartók

Hungarian Jazz at the Naval Museum

By John Shakespeare Dyson | January 28, 2025

On December 15 I attended a jazz concert by Hungarian musicians at the Beşiktaş Naval Museum. The performers were the pianist and song-writer Peter Sárik (the group’s leader), double-bass player Tibor Fonay and drummer Attila Galfi, the trio’s speciality being jazzed-up versions of classical pieces. Actually, that isn’t quite as...

A mistress of unease

Esra Özdoğan's The Ghost in the Machine at Galeri Nev

By Alexandra de Cramer | January 8, 2025


Esra Özdoğan's solo exhibition, The Ghost in the Machine, curated by Çağla Özbek, invites viewers into a world where the boundaries between life, death and illusion are constantly shifting. The title, drawn from the British philosopher Gilbert Ryle’s concept of the 'ghost' inhabiting the 'machine' of the body, offers a framework...
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