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New Zealand’s North Island braces for Cyclone Vaianu with thousands ordered to evacuate Artemis II splashdown – in pictures Swalwell denies allegations of sexual assault as calls grow for him to withdraw from California governor race Trump news at a glance: Epstein survivors have words for Melania Trump after surprise statement Multiple people face charges, including murder, in California fireworks blast Rory McIlroy surges into six-shot Masters lead with stunning second-round flourish Roberto De Zerbi targets ‘Ange-ball’ revival to save Spurs from relegation Bath hit back to reach semi-final after stunning Northampton in 11-try epic Australia crash out of BJK Cup after Britain secure upset with doubles win Zebras, wealth and power: Hungary’s election tests Orbán’s grip on power ‘TikTok effect’ brings sellout crowds and younger fans to Grand National meeting King signs up David Beckham to his Chelsea flower show team The war over Omagh’s gold: the £21bn mine plan tearing a community apart Britain’s shadow workforce is paid as little as 65p an hour. Who cares for the carers? Tim Dowling: my wife is on a quest to restore my thinning hair SUVs are making Britain’s potholes worse, say scientists Blind date: ‘She claimed she was usually shy. I wouldn’t have guessed’ I’m a sauna person now: the Becky Barnicoat cartoon ‘I got everything I dreamed of – when I had no ability to handle it’: Lena Dunham on toxic fame, broken friendships and her ‘lost decade’ Six great reads: the man who let snakes bite him, masked heavy metal and the brutal reality for foreign students in the UK Meera Sodha’s recipe for noodles with rose beancurd, spring greens and egg Cuba’s doctors were a lifeline for the world. Now the Caribbean is shamefully complicit in the US drive to expel them An environmental disaster in Moldova has Russia’s fingerprints all over it ‘This is as important as your teeth’: are you skipping this key part of mouth hygiene? Man arrested after four die trying to cross Channel in small boat Ukraine war briefing: doubts linger in Kyiv over Moscow’s promise to uphold Orthodox Easter ceasefire Ichiro Suzuki statue unveiling goes awry as bronze bat snaps during ceremony Arrest of national war hero Ben Roberts-Smith cuts deeply to core of Australian psyche European football: Real Madrid held at home by Girona to extend winless run ‘You come back different’: how rugby players change after motherhood Human rights groups decry US plan for Guantánamo camp for Cuban migrants Potential US host cities for 2031 Women’s World Cup games mull withdrawal over Fifa concerns Arne Slot insists he is ‘aligned’ with Liverpool board and fans as squad is rebuilt Kamala Harris ‘thinking about’ running for president again in 2028 JD Vance warns Iran against trying to ‘play’ the US in peace talks West Ham double up twice to thrash Wolves and put Spurs in relegation zone Trump administration releases new renderings of so-called ‘Arc de Trump’ Bafta apologises for events surrounding John Davidson’s Tourette’s outburst Cocktail of the week: Bar Shrimp’s la rosita – recipe New drug may extend survival in aggressive ovarian cancer, trial shows One dead and 27 injured after bus with British passengers crashes in Canary Islands OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s home targeted with molotov cocktail Alarm as acting CDC director delays report showing Covid vaccine benefits Argentina just ripped up its pioneering glacier law. 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Could force be the secret to supercharging your fitness? ‘Irresponsible failure’: Google, Meta, Snap and Microsoft slam EU over child sexual abuse law lapse Blank canvas: what to wear with white trousers Critics assemble! Here’s my list of the greatest superhero movies of all time Amazon to finally launch Leo satellite internet in ‘mid-2026’, says CEO Pete Hegseth’s holy war: the militant Christian theology animating the US attack on Iran Toxic putdowns, brutal zingers ... and an unexpected love story – inside the joyful climax to brilliant sitcom Hacks Add to playlist: the beautifully dazed, countrified indie-rock of Tracey Nelson and the week’s best new tracks ‘I’m worried there’s too much of me,’ says a birch: inside the interspecies council giving nature a voice Dolce & Gabbana says co-founder Stefano Gabbana has quit as chair Why is anyone surprised by the US and Israel’s latest war? It’s only what the world allowed them to do in Gaza Super Mario what?! The seven best obscure Mario games Holly Humberstone: Cruel World review – Taylor Swift fave trades gothic melancholy for pop glow-up Thrash review – cursed shark thriller sinks like a stone on Netflix ‘The biggest, baddest, saltiest chick you would ever see’: why no one sang the blues like Big Mama Thornton Go Gentle by Maria Semple review – a joyfully clever New York romcom ‘Tranquil, natural and barely a tourist in sight’: readers’ favourite hidden gems in Spain Benjamina Ebuehi’s sweet and salty chocolate chip cookies recipe ‘I’m not a commercial director – I’m not even a professional film-maker’: Jim Jarmusch on the seven-year journey to make his new film Malcolm in the Middle: Life’s Still Unfair review – the TV magic they’ve created here is absolutely miraculous The Miniature Wife review – Matthew Macfadyen is wasted in this pointless comedy From soups and greens to roots, how to survive the ‘hungry gap’ From fat transplants to LED mittens: how the fear of ‘old lady hands’ mobilised the beauty industry Anna Wintour’s Vogue cover is more than a cameo – it’s a power play ‘They’re gonna make me cry’: I competed at a speed puzzling championship You be the judge: should my girlfriend stop mixing gold and silver jewellery? 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Making earwax melt and teeth rattle: the project returning music to our bodies
https://www.theguardian.com/profile/tomservice · 2026-06-24 · via The Guardian

Professor Bettina Varwig wants to get us moving – and feeling, and listening, but primarily moving. The University of Cambridge academic says classical audiences today are “asked to leave our breathing, pulsing, feeling bodies at the door”. In concert halls we are told not to move or make a sound, subdue all the things that make us human. Whatever you do, don’t give in to the things your body is viscerally telling you when you experience a piece like Bach’s St John Passion, the way the music churns emotions and agitates your sinful heart. You have to listen passively, you can’t sigh or cry or clap in the wrong place, even if that’s what your whole being is telling you that you need to do to communicate the corporeal and spiritual pain the music is putting you through.

Varwig dreams of a different world. Her research focuses on how 17th and 18th-century listeners responded to music. “When you read about how music affected listeners in Bach’s time, their testimonies are striking in their bodily intensity,” she says. “Music contracted their innards and made their hearts leap. It could taste like vinegar in your throat. It could melt your earwax. It could draw your soul out of your body.”

Her research has unearthed a wealth of evidence of listeners feeling the physical and spiritual affects of music. “Philosophers, music theorists, theologians, devotional writers, poets, anatomists, medics and listeners described music as moving, ravishing, painful, dangerous, curative and miraculous,” Varwig says.

“Music could soften your heart, pierce your brain, make your teeth grate and rattle, constrict your chest like it was bound with ropes, or flood you with honeyed sweetness. It could enter your body through the pores of your skin and spread contagiously between people. It could induce melancholic disorders or drive out the plague.”

With musicians at the Royal Academy of Music, the violinist Margaret Faultless and tenor Nicholas Mulroy, Varwig put this theory into practice in a two-day workshop centred on Bach’s St John Passion. The idea wasn’t to prepare a performance or a recording, but to create a workshop in which the musicians were invited to let the music take them wherever they wanted it to.

They weren’t told to dance, play kneeling on the floor, gesticulate or conga to Bach’s contrapuntal intricacies – but that’s what happened. Among the highlights for me are the way the pain of the tenor aria “Ach, mein Sinn” is amplified through what Faultless called the “cosmically messy” intensity of their performance, in which the emotional togetherness of the singer and the players was what mattered the most. And there’s the “unbearable”, as Faultless described it, confrontation with the music and meaning of another tenor aria, “Erwäge, wie sein blutgefärbter Rücken” (“Ponder how his bloodstained back”); the singer and the musicians kneel, entreating heaven with outstretched hands, listening to each to other more intensely and intimately than a conventional concert performance usually allows.

Singing and playing back to back during the Bach’s St John Passion at the Royal Academy of Music.
Singing and playing back to back during the Bach’s St John Passion at the Royal Academy of Music. Photograph: Music in the Flesh

This kind of embodied listening didn’t go away in the 19th century: Hector Berlioz, who trained as a doctor, described listening to Beethoven’s Op 131 quartet with biological precision in 1829: “Bit by bit, a heavy weight seemed to press on my breast as in a horrible nightmare, I felt my hair tingling, my teeth chattering, all my muscles contracting.”

The Promenade concerts, which began in 1895 in London’s Queen’s Hall, were so named because audiences were able to move about, but in general as the 19th century progressed, the silence and stillness of audiences became the culture of classical music, a trend that was identified by Stendhal, Rossini’s biographer, at the Paris opera in 1824: “What will result from this scrupulous silence and continuous attention? That fewer people will enjoy themselves.”

Relaxed listening … an 1898 sketch by Thomas Downey of an early promenade concert at Queen’s Hall, London.
Relaxed listening … an 1898 sketch by Thomas Downey of an early promenade concert at Queen’s Hall, London. Photograph: Rischgitz/Getty Images

Many musical works simply lose much of their power without the engagement of our bodies, from our chattering teeth to our melancholic disorders to our contracting innards. Varwig says she has “utopian visions where this level of physical and emotional engagement among performers and audiences becomes the norm in the classical music world”.

For musicians, the project was transformative. “We found ourselves engaged in music we know so well in such different ways. We experienced the physicality of our own bodies and emotions,” says Faultless. “We were incredibly attuned to our fellow performers and listeners in the room. We were free to inhabit the intensity of Bach’s music, free to move, to breathe together and to respond to the power of the story through our shared humanity … [It felt] intensely immediate, connected and transformative.”

Varwig adds: “I have utopian visions where this level of physical and emotional engagement among performers and audiences becomes the norm in the classical music world.” This is a bold and brilliant idea. There’s work to be done: let’s move!


Starmer’s mood music

Keir Starmer, the former flute-player, has decided to step away from the prime minister’s podium: the double-bar line awaits for the doomed pied piper of politics whose band of converts grew smaller with every passing month of his premiership.

Musical shoots … Keir Starmer watches Guildhall School musicians at a 10 Downing Street reception in 2025.
Musical shoots … Keir Starmer watches Guildhall School musicians at a 10 Downing Street reception in 2025. Photograph: PA Images/Alamy Stock Photo/Alamy Live News

But there are some musical shoots that are worth hanging on to: Starmer is the only leader of a political party or prime minister to mention Shostakovich in a conference speech; the only PM since Edward Heath to profess a genuine love for Beethoven’s symphonies; and he’s a politician who communicated the value of music education, having experienced its benefits first-hand.

Yet we never saw a transformative pitch to put music at the heart of the curriculum in Starmer’s two brief years, and there hasn’t been a massive boost to funding the music portfolio of Arts Council England – in fact the reverse. But the mood music matters, and the feeling that at least Starmer was enthusiastic and understood why music education was so important is something you’ve got to hope his successor picks up. Andy Burnham was culture secretary in Gordon Brown’s government, we know he’s a diehard Everton fan and he loves the Smiths and the Pogues. It’s great to have those passions, Andy, but maybe spread the love for musical culture as a whole, and who knows? Maybe a new era of restoration for music education is ahead of us. Sunny uplands, and all that jazz.


This week, Tom has been listening to: the Orsino Ensemble’s 2021 Belle Époque album, wind and piano music from late-19th and early 20th-century France. The playing from the flautist Adam Walker and his Orsino players is miraculous, in everything from Chaminade to Saint-Saëns. The opening track, Albert Roussel’s Divertissement, is a jewel: the characters that the pianist Pavel Kolesnikov conjures along with the wind players in just a few minutes is staggering. Listen on Spotify | Apple Music Classical