[2][3][4] In his memoir Glanville suggests that his interest in football violence had ended by the time of his marriage to the soprano Julia Melinek, but he later confessed to being drawn back into that world via the notorious hooligan firms of Millwall in south London.
[12] Using songs from the Yiddish folk tradition, many in original arrangements by the composer/accompanist Alexander Knapp, Glanville took Schubert's Winterreise "as a symbol for the destruction of home and family".
[23] 'Barbaric Verses', a new programme developed with pianist Marc Verter, inspired by the life and work of Weinberg, focused on the music and poetry of composers and writers living under totalitarian regimes.
[33] On 2 July 2019 Glanville opened the Pantelleria Festival 'La Musica e il Vento' with songs from different Mediterranean traditions (including Puglia and Sicily) accompanied by Stelios Katsatsidis, accordion-player for Amareterra.
[34] Amaraterra were at the centre of a media storm in December 2020, after claiming that their offer to appear on the BBC's 'Strictly Come Dancing' spin-off programme, 'It Takes Two', was withdrawn once they asked for a fee.