Garsington Opera's Simon Sandbach and Helen Clarke awards have this year gone to baritone Jan Capinski who understudied Father in Hansel and Gretel, and to soprano Alice-Rose Privett who understudied Gretel in Hansel and Gretel. Both sang in the chorus in Maometto Secondo. The awards, formerly known as the Chorus Awards, recognise extraordinary young talent, musical skill and contribution to productions.
Jan Capinski studied at the Academy of Music in his native Krakow and at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama. He recently appeared in British Youth Opera's production of Britten's Paul Bunyan (see my review). Alice-Rose Privett studied at Chethams School of Music, the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and continues her studies at the Royal Academy of Music. She recently appeared in British Youth Opera's production of Cimarosa's The Secret Marriage (see my review)
Thursday 31 October 2013
November on the South Bank
Labels:
preview,
South Bank Centre
November sees the South Bank Centre's The Rest Is Noise Festival reaching ever closer to the present day. The London Philharmonic Orchestra make a strong presences with performances of Messiane, Gubaildulina, Part and Gorecki. Visitors include the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra as well as the Philip Glass Ensemble and Steve Reich. There is also a chance to see Able Gance's epic film Napoleon with a live score.
Things opens with a bang, with Messiaen's Des canoyons aux etoiles, his orchestral description of a vast space inspired by the Grand Canyon, performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra (LPO) under Christoph Eschenbach (2/11). The LPO under Tonu Kaljuste are also performing a Sophia Gubaidulina's Offertorium with violinist Sergej Krylov plus music by Arvo Part including the Berliner Messe in the version for choir (6/11). Under Michal Dworzynski the LPO perform Penderecki's Violin Concerto and Gorecki's Symphony No. 3. (27/11)
Things opens with a bang, with Messiaen's Des canoyons aux etoiles, his orchestral description of a vast space inspired by the Grand Canyon, performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra (LPO) under Christoph Eschenbach (2/11). The LPO under Tonu Kaljuste are also performing a Sophia Gubaidulina's Offertorium with violinist Sergej Krylov plus music by Arvo Part including the Berliner Messe in the version for choir (6/11). Under Michal Dworzynski the LPO perform Penderecki's Violin Concerto and Gorecki's Symphony No. 3. (27/11)
Hampshire Singing Competition
Labels:
news
The finals of the Hampshire Singing Competition took place in Winchester on Monday, 28 October with 17 young singers under 30 competing. In a strong field, first prize went to soprano Sarah-Jane Lewis who won £6,000 and the opportunity to sing with Southern Sinfonia. (We recently saw Lewis in lovely performances of arias from Carmen and Cavalleria Rusticana at a gala for Amazwi Omzansi Africa / Voices of South Africa Project).
Second prize went to baritone Duncan Rock who won £3,000 and the opportunity to sing with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and the Grange Park Opera Aria Prize went to soprano Susanna Hurrell. Tenor Richard Dowling won the song prize with a performance of Britten's Canticle no. 1
Second prize went to baritone Duncan Rock who won £3,000 and the opportunity to sing with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and the Grange Park Opera Aria Prize went to soprano Susanna Hurrell. Tenor Richard Dowling won the song prize with a performance of Britten's Canticle no. 1
Britten, Poulenc and Schubert: Elizabeth Watts and Ashley Riches at the London Song Festival
Labels:
concert review
Ashley Riches Credit: Debbie Scanlon & Ben Cole |
Elizabeth Watts |
Wednesday 30 October 2013
The Birth of the Symphony
This new disc from the Academy of Ancient Music under Richard Egarr, the first on the ensemble's own label, traces the development of the symphony. Starting with the sinfonia from Handel's Saul (1738), we have Franz Xaver Richter's Grande simphonie No. 7 in C minor (1740), Johann Wenzel Anton Stamitz's Sinfonia a 4 in D major (1750), Mozart's Symphony no. 1 in E flat major K16 (1764) and Haydn's Symphony No. 49 in F minor 'La passione' (1768).
This single CD could easily have been a boxed set, and one can think of lots of things that have been missed out (no Boyce and no JC Bach for instance). But here is a whistle-stop survey of the first 30 years of the symphony's development in some very fine performances.
In opera and oratorio, sinfonias were multi-movement works intended to catch the audience's attention. George Frideric Handel's (1685 -1759) Sinfonia from Saul (written in 1738) is a four-movement work with echoes of the French orchestral suite mixed in with other influences. Here we have a lively opening Allegro designed to catch the audiences attention followed by a graceful Larghetto. Then, something of a surprise, a lively Allegro which spotlights the oboe, here performed with a lovely mellow tone by Susanne Regel. The work concludes with a Minuet marked Andante, Handel's structure clearly indicating that this is not a free-standing work but one which precedes something.
This single CD could easily have been a boxed set, and one can think of lots of things that have been missed out (no Boyce and no JC Bach for instance). But here is a whistle-stop survey of the first 30 years of the symphony's development in some very fine performances.
In opera and oratorio, sinfonias were multi-movement works intended to catch the audience's attention. George Frideric Handel's (1685 -1759) Sinfonia from Saul (written in 1738) is a four-movement work with echoes of the French orchestral suite mixed in with other influences. Here we have a lively opening Allegro designed to catch the audiences attention followed by a graceful Larghetto. Then, something of a surprise, a lively Allegro which spotlights the oboe, here performed with a lovely mellow tone by Susanne Regel. The work concludes with a Minuet marked Andante, Handel's structure clearly indicating that this is not a free-standing work but one which precedes something.
Howard Blake 75th birthday
Labels:
concert review
Howard Blake photo Geoffrey Argent |
Benedict Kloekner photo Marco Borgreve |
Benedict Kloeckner (born 1989) originally got into contact with Blake in connection with Blake's virtuosic Diversions for cello and piano. Kloeckner played the work, accompanied by Jose Gallardo in the European Broadcasting Union's Young Artists Competition in Bratislava in 2010, ultimately winning first prize. Blake, as a congratulatory present, gave Kloeckner a new version of Blake's violin sonata transposed for cello. Kloeckner asked Blake if they could do a recital together, the result was an entire programme of Blake's music for cello and piano which they have performed in Germany a number with great success. They are recording the programme for South West German Radio in early 2014.
Tuesday 29 October 2013
November at Kings Place
Labels:
Kings Place,
preview
The Brodsky Quartet are in residence at Kings Place during November, bringing stories of cities, trees and walls. Scene Norway is also present, so that there are a number of Norwegian themed events. And the Kings Place Bach Unwrapped series continues with transcriptions of Bach played on the viola and on the mandolin. A new orchestra, Geneva Camerata, make their first appearance in the UK two months after their debut performance.
The Brodsky Quartet are in residence at Kings Place from 7-9 November presenting a themed group of concerts Trees, Walls, Cities where they mix Bjork with Purcell, Schubert with Alvaris and Prokofiev with Elvis Costello. They are joined on their journey by vocalist Lore Lixenberg, travelling the world in music, telling stories and confounding expectations. Included in their first programme will be Trees, Walls and Cities, a song cycle comprising of eight songs each from an appropriate city: Derry, London, Utrecht, Berlin, Vienna, Dubrovnik, Nicosia and Jerusalem. Their final programme is centred on Elvis Costello's ballet music Il Sogno (commissioned for Aterballetto) and which the quartet play in an arrangement by Robert Davidson. Davidson's own tongue-in-cheek piece, Three Men and a Blonde written for the quartet's 40th anniversary also features in the programme.
The Brodsky Quartet are in residence at Kings Place from 7-9 November presenting a themed group of concerts Trees, Walls, Cities where they mix Bjork with Purcell, Schubert with Alvaris and Prokofiev with Elvis Costello. They are joined on their journey by vocalist Lore Lixenberg, travelling the world in music, telling stories and confounding expectations. Included in their first programme will be Trees, Walls and Cities, a song cycle comprising of eight songs each from an appropriate city: Derry, London, Utrecht, Berlin, Vienna, Dubrovnik, Nicosia and Jerusalem. Their final programme is centred on Elvis Costello's ballet music Il Sogno (commissioned for Aterballetto) and which the quartet play in an arrangement by Robert Davidson. Davidson's own tongue-in-cheek piece, Three Men and a Blonde written for the quartet's 40th anniversary also features in the programme.
Mark Padmore - Britten Canticles - Wigmore Hall Live
Labels:
cd review,
Wigmore Hall
This disc preserves the performance of Benjamin Britten's Canticles given at the Wigmore Hall on 30 November 2012. Tenor Mark Padmore was joined by counter-tenor Iestyn Davies, and baritone Marcus Farnsworth, with Julius Drake (piano), Lucy Wakeford (harp) and Richard Watkins (horn) for performances of Canticle I: My Beloved is mine, Canticle II: Abraham and Isaac, Canticle V: The Death of Saint Narcissus, Canticle IV: Journey of the Magi and Canticle III: Still falls the Rain - The Raids, 1940, Night and Dawn, with the disc released on the Wigmore Hall Live label.
Britten's Canticles span much of his creative life, with the first Canticle I: My Beloved is mine written for himself and Peter Pears in 1947 and the last one Canticle V: The Death of Saint Narcissus written in 1974 when the composer was recovering from heart surgery. Canticle V: The Death of Saint Narcissus was written for Peter Pears and Ossian Ellis, because the composer was too frail to play the piano in public. Whilst the canticles were all written individually and have a rather eclectic mix of texts, they share a commonality. All were written for friends and close collaborators; Peter Pears was a constant, but also Kathleen Ferrier, James Bowman, Ossian Ellis, Denis Brain and John Shirley Quirk. Also, many of the canticles link to the operas that Britten was writing at the time, so that Canticle IV: Journey of the Magi comes just before Death in Venice, Canticle II: Abraham and Isaac has links to Billy Budd and Canticle III: Still falls the Rain has a structure which links to The Turn of the Screw, the opera which preceded it.
Britten's Canticles span much of his creative life, with the first Canticle I: My Beloved is mine written for himself and Peter Pears in 1947 and the last one Canticle V: The Death of Saint Narcissus written in 1974 when the composer was recovering from heart surgery. Canticle V: The Death of Saint Narcissus was written for Peter Pears and Ossian Ellis, because the composer was too frail to play the piano in public. Whilst the canticles were all written individually and have a rather eclectic mix of texts, they share a commonality. All were written for friends and close collaborators; Peter Pears was a constant, but also Kathleen Ferrier, James Bowman, Ossian Ellis, Denis Brain and John Shirley Quirk. Also, many of the canticles link to the operas that Britten was writing at the time, so that Canticle IV: Journey of the Magi comes just before Death in Venice, Canticle II: Abraham and Isaac has links to Billy Budd and Canticle III: Still falls the Rain has a structure which links to The Turn of the Screw, the opera which preceded it.
Monday 28 October 2013
Julian Anderson residency at Wigmore Hall
Labels:
preview,
Wigmore Hall
Saturday 2 November sees the opening concerts in composer Julian Anderson's three years as Composer in Residence at the Wigmore Hall. Two concerts, at 1pm and at 7.30pm place Anderson's music in the context of his colleagues and mentors, Oliver Knussen, George Benjamin, Hans Abrahamsen, Salvatore Sciarrino and Gerard Grisey. Anderson's music being performed includes recent instrumental compositions and the premiere of Another Prayer. Further concerts of Anderson's music in context will be given at the Wigmore Hall as part of the residency on 23 January and 15 May 2014. Anderson's music also features as part of the London Philharmonic Orchestra's season, and his opera Thebans debuts at the London Coliseum in May 2014.
Ailish Tynan - Faure Melodies
Labels:
cd review
In the latest CD in Rosenblatt Recitals series on Opus Arte, soprano Ailish Tynan and pianist Iain Burnside perform a selection of melodies by Gabriel Faure. Famously long-lived Faure (1845 - 1924) wrote songs throughout his life, those selected on this new disc range from Mai, Op.1 No.2 (published in 1871) to the late cycle Le Jardin Clos, Op.106 published in 1915 when he was 70 as well as a group of his Verlaine settings including CInq Melodies de Venise Op.58.
The disc opens with a pair of settings of Leconte de Lisle. Nell, Op.18 No.1 from 1878 sets a text loosely based on Robert Burns (the Nell of the title is Burn's first love, Nell Kirkpatrick!). Tynan sings the song with an easy fluidity. Les roses d'Isphahan (The roses of Isfahan o 1884) is an oriental love-song given and intimate and subtle performance which gets more intense as the song progresses.
Tynan's voice has a nice forward bright sound with a clear top and quite a narrow focus. She has an expressive use of vibrato, and a vocal style which is very distinctive. On first listening I did worry that her technique might sound too stylised in these songs, but it didn't worry me on repeated listening. And you cannot but warm to the lyric beauty of her voice.
The disc opens with a pair of settings of Leconte de Lisle. Nell, Op.18 No.1 from 1878 sets a text loosely based on Robert Burns (the Nell of the title is Burn's first love, Nell Kirkpatrick!). Tynan sings the song with an easy fluidity. Les roses d'Isphahan (The roses of Isfahan o 1884) is an oriental love-song given and intimate and subtle performance which gets more intense as the song progresses.
Tynan's voice has a nice forward bright sound with a clear top and quite a narrow focus. She has an expressive use of vibrato, and a vocal style which is very distinctive. On first listening I did worry that her technique might sound too stylised in these songs, but it didn't worry me on repeated listening. And you cannot but warm to the lyric beauty of her voice.
Rough for Opera with Kate Whitley and Amir Mahyar Tafreshipour
Labels:
opera review
Second Movement's Rough for Opera returned to the Cockpit Theatre for its second birthday, giving us the chance to see two new pieces, operas recently composed or still in development. Kate Whitley's In Flagrante was a one act opera lasting 30 minutes, with a libretto by Ian Burrows, which took the mythological characters of Orpheus and Bacchus, put them together to see what happened. Amir Mahyar Tafreshipour's The Doll Behind the Curtain is a work in development. Based on a short story by the Iranian writer Sadegh Hedayat (1903 - 1951), the opera has a libretto by Dominic Power. We saw scenes from act one. After both performances we had a Q&A session with the artists to learn more about the background to the pieces.
Kate Whitley and Ian Burrows In Flagrante arose from the suggestion of Ian Christians who owns 'Orpheus and Bacchus Experiences'. As Ian Burrows pointed out at the Q&A, in fact Orpheus and Bacchus do not interact in mythology so he and Kate Whitley had to concoct their own story. The result was intended to provoke a discussion of the dichotomy between the Orphic attitude, beating yourself up in consequence of your actions, and Bacchus's divine inconsequence.
Kate Whitley and Ian Burrows In Flagrante arose from the suggestion of Ian Christians who owns 'Orpheus and Bacchus Experiences'. As Ian Burrows pointed out at the Q&A, in fact Orpheus and Bacchus do not interact in mythology so he and Kate Whitley had to concoct their own story. The result was intended to provoke a discussion of the dichotomy between the Orphic attitude, beating yourself up in consequence of your actions, and Bacchus's divine inconsequence.
Sunday 27 October 2013
Cool Passion: BREMF opening event
Labels:
BREMF,
concert review
This year's Brighton Early Music Festival (BREMF) opened with Cool Passion, what was billed as an Early Music Club Night, with 22 musicians including I Flautisti, the Borromini Quartet, the Little Baroque Company, Flauguissimo, Il Nuovo Chiaroscuro, mezzo-soprano Esther Brazil, baritone Greg Skidmore and bass viol player Alison Kinder gathered at St Bartholomew's Church, Brighton on 26 October 2013. With Piers Adams of Red Priest as presenter, they performed two and half hours of music ranging from early Renaissance through to late 18th century. Highlights of the concert will be broadcast on the Early Music Show on Sunday 3 November on BBC Radio 3.
St Bartholomew's Church is a huge space and it was laid out with three different stages, one in front of the main altar on the chancel steps, one at the side of the nave and one on the balcony high up at the back of the church. Acts appeared in all three of the stages and this meant that the evening progressed fluidly, with no awkward gaps for re-setting stages. The audience sat informally in the nave space, most on chairs but some sitting on the floor. But that was as casual as it got, the audience was very attentive, there was little moving around and most people seemed to arrive in time for the 8pm start and stayed till the 10.40pm finish.
The aim of BREMF's club night events isn't just to present music in a more casual atmosphere, but also to give a platform for a wide range of young groups which the festivals supports and nurtures. Via the link-up with BBC Radio 3, many of the groups will get their first broadcast exposure. We were treated to some fascinating music and some inspiring performances from a range of fine young musicians.
St Bartholomew's Church is a huge space and it was laid out with three different stages, one in front of the main altar on the chancel steps, one at the side of the nave and one on the balcony high up at the back of the church. Acts appeared in all three of the stages and this meant that the evening progressed fluidly, with no awkward gaps for re-setting stages. The audience sat informally in the nave space, most on chairs but some sitting on the floor. But that was as casual as it got, the audience was very attentive, there was little moving around and most people seemed to arrive in time for the 8pm start and stayed till the 10.40pm finish.
The aim of BREMF's club night events isn't just to present music in a more casual atmosphere, but also to give a platform for a wide range of young groups which the festivals supports and nurtures. Via the link-up with BBC Radio 3, many of the groups will get their first broadcast exposure. We were treated to some fascinating music and some inspiring performances from a range of fine young musicians.
Exaudi: Exposure 13
Labels:
by Hilary Glover,
concert review
Having just been to see the Clerks and their experiment into the
perception of words in music (see review on this blog), I listened to the Exaudi Vocal Ensemble’s Exposure 13 concert at the Only Connect Theatre in Kings Cross (on Tuesday 22 October 2013) with a new (sic) pair of ears.
A brief pre-concert talk gave two of the composers, Evan Johnson and Cassandra Miller, a chance to talk to Sara Mohr-Pietsch and Exaudi director James Weeks about their compositions. Both composers were very down to earth and endearing, and shared something about their compositional process for the pieces performed. But more of that later.
A brief pre-concert talk gave two of the composers, Evan Johnson and Cassandra Miller, a chance to talk to Sara Mohr-Pietsch and Exaudi director James Weeks about their compositions. Both composers were very down to earth and endearing, and shared something about their compositional process for the pieces performed. But more of that later.
Saturday 26 October 2013
Donizetti's Belisario
Labels:
cd review
Donizetti's opera Belisario has been having something of a birthday recently in the UK. First Chelsea Opera Group performed it with Nelly Miricioiu as Antonina, conducted by Richard Bonynge in 2011, and then Mark Elder conducted the BBC Symphony Orchestra in concert at the Barbican with a strong cast who were then about to record the work for Opera Rara. And now Opera Rara has released the disc, with Alastair Miles as Giustiniano, Nicola Alaimo as Belisario, Joyce El-Khoury as Antonina, Camilla Roberts as Irene and Russell Thomas as Alamiro, Mark Elder conducting the BBC Symphony Orchestra and BBC Singers.
Belisario was the next opera that Donizetti wrote after Lucia di Lammermoor. He wrote it for Venice for the Carnival season of 1835-36. it was the last opera to be produced in the season, there were cast problems and, frankly, Donizetti had set far better librettos. But the performances were a success and, despite the poor dramaturgy, Donizetti came up with some of his strongest music in two of the scenes.
Belisario was the next opera that Donizetti wrote after Lucia di Lammermoor. He wrote it for Venice for the Carnival season of 1835-36. it was the last opera to be produced in the season, there were cast problems and, frankly, Donizetti had set far better librettos. But the performances were a success and, despite the poor dramaturgy, Donizetti came up with some of his strongest music in two of the scenes.
Greek - Music Theatre Wales
Labels:
opera review
Music Theatre Wales: Greek Marcus Farnsworth (Eddy). Photo: Clive Barda. |
Greek was Turnage's first opera written for Munich in 1988. Instead of having a libretto written Turnage set his own adaptation of Stephen Berkoff's play Greek, setting the play pretty literally. This means that the opera is very dependent on the general mis-en-scene of Berkoff's original which was intended as a commentary on the strikes and riots in 1980's Britain under Margaret Thatcher. Berkoff re-set the story of Oedipus in the East End of London with the plague a clear analogy for strike-torn society. The whole thing could descend into bathos, with opera singers attempting to sing in East End accents and re-creating 1980's riots. But Turnage has written such a visceral score which takes you by the scruff of the neck and drags you with it for two hours, that it demands to be staged.
Friday 25 October 2013
Endelllion String Quartet 35th anniversary
Labels:
preview
The Endellion String Quartet celebrates its 35th anniversary during the 2013/14 season. The quartet is resident at Cambridge University and will be presenting six concert's at West Road Concert Hall in Cambridge. For three of the concerts, Andrew Watkinson, Ralph de Souza, Garfield Jackson and David Waterman will be joined by violist David Adams for performances of Mozart's six String Quintets. The concert series opens on 30 October with Schubert's Death and the Maiden Quartet plus quartets by Haydn and Mendelssohn. The series continues with Mozart String Quintets plus Haydn's Lark Quartet on 27 November 2013. Further and on-line booking from the Cambridge Corn-Exchange website.
Supporting the Amazwi Omzansi Africa / Voices of South Africa Project
Labels:
concert review,
feature article
Njabula Madlala |
Madlala's Amazawi Omzansi Africa/Voices of South Africa Project started in 2010 when he started invited colleagues and friends to travel to South Africa with him and work with young people there. This developed into offering training workshops and staged concerts. In January 2013 they heard more than 200 singers audition across South Africa and Swaziland to take part in workshops and a singing competition. This is being repeated in 2014 with auditions in Bloemfontein, Cape Town, Durban, Johannesburg, Port Elizabeth, Pretoria and Swaziland. Five singers will be chosen from each city and invited to Durban to take part in the final of the competition and a week of intensive workshops and training with invited guests.
Thursday 24 October 2013
British Composer Awards - 2013 short-list announced
Labels:
news
Harrison Birtwistle collecting the Orchestral award British Composer Awards 2012 photo Mark Allan |
The awards were founded in 2003 and celebrate the music of contemporary British composers, apart from the International Award, the composers must either be British or have been resident in the UK for 5 years, and the works celebrated are those premiered in the UK in the previous year.
Scottish Ensemble at the Wigmore Hall
Labels:
preview,
Wigmore Hall
The Scottish Ensemble return to London's Wigmore Hall on Saturday 26 October for a programme which includes Walton's Sonata for Strings, and arrangement of Brahms String Quartet No. 2 in G minor and music by two young contemporary composers Leopold Hurt and Martin Suckling. The ensemble are also playing for the Sunday morning coffee concert on 27 October when they will be joined by pianist Alasdair Beatson in Schubert's Trout Quintet, plus Alasdair Sprott's Bite.
The ensemble return to the Wigmore Hall on 26 Feburary 2014 when they are joined by mezzo-soprano Sophie Harmsen to perform Dvorak's Love Songs, arias by Handel plus Biber's wonderful Battalia as well as music by Sugk and Pavel Haas. Further information from the Wigmore Hall website.
The ensemble return to the Wigmore Hall on 26 Feburary 2014 when they are joined by mezzo-soprano Sophie Harmsen to perform Dvorak's Love Songs, arias by Handel plus Biber's wonderful Battalia as well as music by Sugk and Pavel Haas. Further information from the Wigmore Hall website.
Ned Rorem - Evidence of Things Unseen
Labels:
concert review
Ned Rorem |
The work was written in 1997 and all but two of the songs were written by Rorem specifically for the cycle. He has grouped the songs into three sections, Beginnings, Middles, Ends, and the theme is all human existence from birth to death. With such a complex set of texts, the cycle has a fascinatingly operatic feel to it in the way that there seems to be an underlying drama running through with different songs interacting and commenting on each other. Rorem emphasises this by having some songs sung by groups of singers, the cycle is by no means a sequence of 36 solo songs.
The theme of love is, of course, one that threads its way prominently through the songs but, being a work by Ned Rorem this means that in addition to Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Browning we get more homo-erotic texts. Then in the final section, last two great songs on the subject of death are both meditations on AIDS (by Mark Doty and Paul Monette). It is still remarkably rare to find such subjects touched on in art songs, and it is testament to Rorem's skill that he weaves these themes so successfully into the rest of the cycle.
Wednesday 23 October 2013
Being a bloke - An encounter with Helen Sherman
Labels:
interview
Helen Sherman as Aurelio in L'Assedio di Calais, English Touring Opera, Photo credit Richard Hubert Smith |
Our conversation in fact started with Sherman's previous role with ETO, Aurelio. The role was something of a mile-stone, not only did she garner good reviews but it was her first major bel-canto role. Singing it as a man she found that as well as the role's tessitura suiting her voice being masculine in her body language helped to make her feel grounded. When I talked to her about preparing for roles, Sherman echoed Beryl Reed in that finding the right shoes is imperative to start building the character.
Having succeed with Aurelio in L'Assedio di Calais she admits that the challenge is going to be to get she same physicality in her performance whilst wearing a frock and heels. She will be returning to the role of Rosina in Rossini's Il Barbiere di Sivigla next year at Longborough, and she is keen to apply what she learned even though she will be wearing a corset.
Brahms Beloved - exploring the relationship between Brahms and Clara Schumann
Labels:
cd review
This new disc from John Axelrod and the Orchestra Sinfonica di Milano Giuseppe Verdi on Telarc, tries to explore the relationship between Johannes Brahms and Clara Schumann. Axelrod conducts the orchestra in Brahms's Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op.73 and Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op.98. These are paired with performances of songs by Clara Schumann sung by Nicole Cabell and Indra Thomas accompanied by Axelrod on piano. The results are intriguing but don't quite make for a satisfying programme, though having 10 of Clara Schumann's songs on disc is an attractive prospect.
The relationship between Brahms and Clara Schumann is one that has continued to tantalised commentators. Fourteen years her junior, Brahms was a great emotional support in the period when Schumann attempted suicide, and after Schumann's death. Quite how close their relationship was, we probably will never know as both destroyed letters. Various theories have been put forward, including one that Brahms was attracted the Schumann's daughter. John Axelrod believes that Brahms had a madonna-whore complex.
The relationship between Brahms and Clara Schumann is one that has continued to tantalised commentators. Fourteen years her junior, Brahms was a great emotional support in the period when Schumann attempted suicide, and after Schumann's death. Quite how close their relationship was, we probably will never know as both destroyed letters. Various theories have been put forward, including one that Brahms was attracted the Schumann's daughter. John Axelrod believes that Brahms had a madonna-whore complex.
Tuesday 22 October 2013
The Clerks – Tales from Babel (Musical adventures in the science of hearing)
Labels:
by Hilary Glover,
concert review
In collaboration with the Wellcome
Trust and scientists from the University
of Cambridge and the University
of Nottingham, tonight’s (Friday 18 October 2013) performance by the Clerks
at the Royal Academy of Music peered around the boundaries between
science and music. Edward
Wickham first became interested in what an audience hears when
listening to polyphonic vocal music and together with Christopher
Fox developed ‘Tales from Babel’ and ‘Roger go to yellow
three...’ a modern investigation of the problem.
In Genesis there is the premise that all the people in the world originally spoke one language, but that after the great flood God saw that people in a new city with its tower were becoming too powerful. Consequently He decided to scatter them all over the earth, confusing language so that the different groups could no longer understand one another. From this point on the city was called ‘Babel’ meaning to jumble.
In Genesis there is the premise that all the people in the world originally spoke one language, but that after the great flood God saw that people in a new city with its tower were becoming too powerful. Consequently He decided to scatter them all over the earth, confusing language so that the different groups could no longer understand one another. From this point on the city was called ‘Babel’ meaning to jumble.
The European Music Campus - Youth, Music and Renewal at the Heart of Europe
Labels:
news
European Union Youth Orchestra in Berlin, 2013 |
The first edition of the European Music Campus will focus on Looking East in Europe, towards the former Soviet Union and to the countries which once seemed to be on the opposite side of Europe. Russian conductor Semyon Bychkov will conduct the European Union Youth Orchestra in Shostakovich's Symphony No. 4 as part of the summer festival and lead the Campus debate.
Angel Blue at Rosenblatt Recitals
Labels:
concert review,
Rosenblatt Recitals;,
Wigmore Hall
Having impressed UK audiences in La Boheme (for ENO) and American Lulu (for the Opera Group/Scottish Opera), Californian soprano Angel Blue made her much anticipated recital debut at the Wigmore Hall for Rosenblatt Recitals on Monday 21 October 2013. Accompanied by pianist Catherine Miller, Angel Blue sang a programme which opened with the Alleluia from Mozart's Exsultate Jubilate, continued with songs by Richard Strauss and Sergei Rachmaninov, then moved into the opera arias by Gershwin, Chapi, Puccini, Wagner, Cilea, and Verdi.
Judging by her repertoire and recent roles (Musetta, Lulu, Lucia di Lammermoor, La Traviata ) I had assumed that Angel Blue would have a voice which was in the lyric/soubrette/coloratura range but not a bit. She has a bright, vibrant voice which is admirably even throughout the range including a fine upper extension and she combines easy facility and flexibility with remarkable power. This was a voice which, when she opened up, filled the Wigmore Hall. Her inclusion of Dich teure Halle from Wagner's Tannhäuser made complete sense in the context of her vocal capacity. And I certainly agree with those who have compared her to a young Leontyne Price.
Judging by her repertoire and recent roles (Musetta, Lulu, Lucia di Lammermoor, La Traviata ) I had assumed that Angel Blue would have a voice which was in the lyric/soubrette/coloratura range but not a bit. She has a bright, vibrant voice which is admirably even throughout the range including a fine upper extension and she combines easy facility and flexibility with remarkable power. This was a voice which, when she opened up, filled the Wigmore Hall. Her inclusion of Dich teure Halle from Wagner's Tannhäuser made complete sense in the context of her vocal capacity. And I certainly agree with those who have compared her to a young Leontyne Price.
Monday 21 October 2013
Modern Times in Manchester
Charlie Chaplin's 1936 film Modern Times marked the last screen appearance of Chaplin's character the Little Tramp. It is also features Chaplin's largest and most sophisticated score; the film was released as a sound film but with no dialogue, even though talking pictures had been established for more than a decade. There is just Chaplin's music and sound effects. The film itself is a biting and darkly funny critique of the dehumanising effects of industrialisation.
In 1999 the composer Timothy Brock restored and reconstructed the score for live performance and on Saturday 26 October 2013 at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester there is a chance to see the film with the score performed live by the RNCM Symphony Orchestra conducted by Clark Rundell, head of conducting at the RNCM. Further information from the RNCM website.
In 1999 the composer Timothy Brock restored and reconstructed the score for live performance and on Saturday 26 October 2013 at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester there is a chance to see the film with the score performed live by the RNCM Symphony Orchestra conducted by Clark Rundell, head of conducting at the RNCM. Further information from the RNCM website.
Win tickets to hear Roderick Williams singing Brahms' 'Die schöne Magelone'
Labels:
Competition
Title page from Die schön Magelona Augsburg 1535 |
Make sure you enter before the competition closes at midnight on 26 October, see our competition page for full details of how to enter.
The Songmen - Demonstrating Versatility
Labels:
cd review
The Songmen is an ensemble of six young male singers in an a cappella group, one of a number such taking the Kings Singers as models. The Songmen's repertoire mixes modern takes on popular standards with items from the choral canon. Their first two discs showcase both these talents. Midnight is full of a cappella takes on cool jazz and popular classics with a lot of beat-box and doo-wop style accompaniment. Whilst A Sacred Place consists of the sort of repertoire that many of the singers will be familiar with from their training as Cathedral songmen.
Midnight opens with Mr Bojangles (Walker) arranged by Guy Lewis, one of the group's counter-tenors. The singers are quite closely recorded, but they give the song a lovely relaxed feel, albeit with some nicely on-sync rhythms. This is a very polished performance, and the song has a very contemporary feel with beat-box style percussive accompaniment. Something which seems a speciality of the group and crops up on a number of tracks.
Midnight opens with Mr Bojangles (Walker) arranged by Guy Lewis, one of the group's counter-tenors. The singers are quite closely recorded, but they give the song a lovely relaxed feel, albeit with some nicely on-sync rhythms. This is a very polished performance, and the song has a very contemporary feel with beat-box style percussive accompaniment. Something which seems a speciality of the group and crops up on a number of tracks.
Sunday 20 October 2013
Corinne Morris: Macedonian Sessions
Labels:
cd review
British/French cellist Corinne Morris trained at both the Royal College of Music and the Paris Conservatoire, doing a post-graduate degree at the University of Music in Austria. But a promising career was cut short by a debilitating shoulder injury. After a gap of five years, treatment from the field of sports medicine has enable her to pick up her career. This new disc, recorded with Philip Hesketh and the Macedonian Radio Symphony Orchestra shows her picking up the threads of her career. On the disc she performs a mixture of shorter classics from the concertante cello repertoire along with lesser known pieces, including Bruch's Kol Nidrei Op.14, Saint Saen's Allegro Appasionato Op.43, Tchaikovsky's Nocturne Op.19 No.4, Woldemar Bargiel's Adagio Op.38, Tchaikovsky's Andante Cantabile Op.14, John Williams' Theme from Schindler's List, her own Un Ultime Volte, Faure's Elegie Op.24, Massenet's Meditation from Thais, Piazolla's Oblivion and Falla's Ritual Fire Dance.
Morris opens with the longest piece on the disc, Max Bruch's Kol Nidrei, his 1881 work based on Hebrew melodies. Morris displays a lovely singing line and fine grained tone. The bring a rich chestnut sound to the lower register and performs the work with elegant style and gentle melancholy. There is a good dialogue between soloist and orchestra and the recording rather made me wish to hear Morris performing the Dvorak Cello Concerto.
Morris opens with the longest piece on the disc, Max Bruch's Kol Nidrei, his 1881 work based on Hebrew melodies. Morris displays a lovely singing line and fine grained tone. The bring a rich chestnut sound to the lower register and performs the work with elegant style and gentle melancholy. There is a good dialogue between soloist and orchestra and the recording rather made me wish to hear Morris performing the Dvorak Cello Concerto.
Autumn Music at the Temple: Sacconi Quartet
Labels:
by Hilary Glover,
concert review
The Sacconi Quartet Picture credit David Merewether |
The quartets programme reflected two composer centenaries, as they played Verdi's String Quartet paired with Puccini's Crisantemi, and Britten's Second String Quartet paired with Purcell's Chaconne.
Saturday 19 October 2013
New Music North West
The Royal Northern College of Music (RNCM) and the University of Manchester are presenting New Music North West, the UK's largest festival of new British music, from 26 October to 2 November. The week-long festival takes place mainly at the RNCM and at the university's Martin Harris Centre. There is the opportunity to hear groups such as the BBC Philharmonic, Psappha, Ensemble 10/10 and the House of Bedlam and the Liverpool-born composer Edwin Roxburgh features heavily. The festival includes over 10 world premieres and 24 of the concerts are free.
For the opening weekend MANTIS (Manchester Theatre in Sound) will be presenting a weekend of electro-acoustic concerts. Works which received their premiere at the RNCM's Sound Histories event at the British Museum in July this year will be receiving their Manchester premieres on the RNCM concourse.
For the opening weekend MANTIS (Manchester Theatre in Sound) will be presenting a weekend of electro-acoustic concerts. Works which received their premiere at the RNCM's Sound Histories event at the British Museum in July this year will be receiving their Manchester premieres on the RNCM concourse.
Viktoria Mullova, Ottavio Dantone and Accademia Bizantina in Bach
Labels:
concert;
Viktoria Mullova recently released a disc of Bach violin concertos with Ottavio Dantone and Accademia Bizantina (see my review), and now she and the group brought a programme of four Bach concertos to the Wigmore Hall. On Friday 18 October Viktoria Mullova was the soloist, accompanied by Accademia Bizantina directed from the harpsichord by Ottavio Dantone, in Bach's Concerto in A minor for vioolin BWV1041 and Concerto in D for violin BWV1042, plus two of Dantone's transcriptions Concerto in C minor for violin and harpsichord (transcription of BWV1060) and Concerto in D for violin (transcription of BWV1053). A packed Wigmore Hall audience were all very eager to hear Mullova's particular clean-limbed Bach in live performance.
These were small scale performances, with a total of seven performers in all, just Mullova plus single violins, viola, cello and double bass with Dantone on harpsichord. But Mullova was very much part of the ensemble, these were performances notable for the collegiality with Mullova primus inter pares. All played standing, with Mullova playing in the tuttis and leading the players by example.
These were small scale performances, with a total of seven performers in all, just Mullova plus single violins, viola, cello and double bass with Dantone on harpsichord. But Mullova was very much part of the ensemble, these were performances notable for the collegiality with Mullova primus inter pares. All played standing, with Mullova playing in the tuttis and leading the players by example.
Friday 18 October 2013
First look: Les Vepres Siciliennes at Covent Garden
Labels:
Covent Garden,
opera review
Erwin Schrott and dancers in Les Vepres Siciliennes (c) ROH/Bill Cooper 2013 |
Director Stefan Herheim, working at Covent Garden for the first time, brought his famously historical approach to bear on the opera. Working with his regular collaborator dramaturg Alexander Meier-Dorzenbach, with set designs by Philipp Fürhofer and costumes by Geine Völlm, Herheim set the piece within a theatre during the period of the opera's composition. There was a strong cast, including Lianna Haroutounian as Helen, Michael Volle as Guy de Montfort, Bryan Hymel as Henri and Erwin Schrott as Jean Procida with Antonio Pappano conducting.
I will be reviewing a later performance of the opera in detail, but one of Planet Hugill's other contributors attended the first night on 17 October 2013 and this first look is based on his report.
City Music Foundation Showcase Concert 2013
Labels:
concert review
The City Music Foundation Award winners 2013 with Sir Richard Stilgoe and Director of CMF, Lizzie Allen |
Mikhail Nemtsov, cello - award winner 2013 |
Thursday 17 October 2013
ETO's Laika the Spacedog wins two Best Production awards at international opera festival
English Touring Opera's opera for young people Laika the Spacedog (which I reviewed in January 2013) has won two awards at the Armel Opera Competition, part of the Armel Opera Festival in Szeged, Hungary. In a remarkable feat for an opera made for Primary Schools, the opera won the International Jury Prize for Best Production and the University of Szeged prize for Best Production. In winning the International Jury Prize for Best Production the production saw off competition from productions of Stravinsky’s Oedipus Rex, Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra and Britten’s The Turn of the Screw; the first ever British opera and the first opera for children to win the Armel Opera Competition’s prize for Best Production. (Follow the Read more link to see a video of the performance).
London International A Cappella Choir Competition
Labels:
news
Choirs have until the 31 October 2013 to enter the first round of the inaugural London International A Cappella Choir Competition. The competition will bring together 16 choirs from around the world in a series of public concerts at St John's Smith Square. The competition, from 21 to 26 April 2014 celebrates Sir John Taverner's 70th birthday and is organised in association with Peter Phillips and the Tallis Scholars. Peter Phillips will be chairing the jury.
The competition is open to any a cappella choir of at least 16 voices. Initially the choir must fill in an application form (available from the St Johns Smith Square website) and provide two recent recordings. The full application must be completed by 31 October 2013. Those selected will then perform in one of the preliminary rounds (22-25 April 2014) in a programme lasting 25 minutes. Those selected for the final perform a 30 minute programme each on 26 April 2014.
Further information from the St Johns Smith Square website.
The competition is open to any a cappella choir of at least 16 voices. Initially the choir must fill in an application form (available from the St Johns Smith Square website) and provide two recent recordings. The full application must be completed by 31 October 2013. Those selected will then perform in one of the preliminary rounds (22-25 April 2014) in a programme lasting 25 minutes. Those selected for the final perform a 30 minute programme each on 26 April 2014.
Further information from the St Johns Smith Square website.
Ludwig Thuille: Songs
Labels:
cd review
Rarely do I find myself discovering music that is entirely new to me. But Ludwig Thuille (1861 - 1907), the composer of these lovely songs, was a name that was unfamiliar. An older contemporary of Richard Strauss's, his music seems to have dropped out of circulation; so much so, that his Lieder are not in print at the moment. On this disc Sophie Bevan, Mary Bevan and Jennifer Johnston sing a selection of Thuille's lieder accompanied by Joseph Middleton.
Thuille was born in Bozen, part of the Tyrol when Thuille was born but now part of Italy. He studied first in Innsbruck, where he met Richard Strauss who became a life-long friend and then with Josef Rheinberger in Munich. It was in Munich that he made his second home, forming what became known as the Munich school with Strauss and with Max Schillings. It is puzzling why Thuille's songs have not remained in currency, Joseph Middleton's excellent article in the CD booklet offers no illumination here, but perhaps Thuille's early death in 1907 at the age of 46 rather contributed to it.
Whilst the voice of Richard Strauss can inevitably be heard in the songs, there are also other influences notable amongst them being Robert Schumann for whose work Thuille had a great love. He remained a fairly conservative composer and the songs on this disc never achieve the daring that some of Strauss's do. But Thuille remains and interesting voice, and a neglected strand in the history of the German lied.
Thuille was born in Bozen, part of the Tyrol when Thuille was born but now part of Italy. He studied first in Innsbruck, where he met Richard Strauss who became a life-long friend and then with Josef Rheinberger in Munich. It was in Munich that he made his second home, forming what became known as the Munich school with Strauss and with Max Schillings. It is puzzling why Thuille's songs have not remained in currency, Joseph Middleton's excellent article in the CD booklet offers no illumination here, but perhaps Thuille's early death in 1907 at the age of 46 rather contributed to it.
Whilst the voice of Richard Strauss can inevitably be heard in the songs, there are also other influences notable amongst them being Robert Schumann for whose work Thuille had a great love. He remained a fairly conservative composer and the songs on this disc never achieve the daring that some of Strauss's do. But Thuille remains and interesting voice, and a neglected strand in the history of the German lied.
Wednesday 16 October 2013
Stunning versatility - the BBC Singers at Milton Court
Labels:
concert review
David Hill conducts the BBC Singers and Endymion in Steve Reich’s The Desert Music at Milton Court Concert Hall Copyright: BBC/ Sarah Jeynes |
The hall is a classic shoebox style venue, clad mainly in warm wood but with some striking 1950's style plasterwork decoration on the side walls. In fact, there is something rather 1950's about the whole of the styling of the hall. The ceiling of the hall is strikingly high and there are wooden reflectors suspended from it, adjustable to provide for differences in acoustic. The main body of the hall is not very steeply raked and I was sure about sight lines.
Tuesday 15 October 2013
Eaton Square Concerts
Labels:
preview
The Eaton Square Concerts series continues on 17 October 2013, with a recital by pianist Tom Poster who plays music by Schubert, Beethoven and Chopin plus a selection of Gershwin songs and the Shrovetide Fair from Stravinsky's Petrushka.
Then on 24 October, the Vasari Singers and conductor Jeremy Backhouse perform Allegri's Miserer, James MacMillan's Miserere, Parry's Songs of Farewell plus Gabriel Jackson's Requiem which was commissioned by the choir. On 7 November, the Trusler Carroll Wass Trio - violinists Matthew Trusler, cellist Thomas Carroll and pianist Ashley Wass - perform Copland's VItebsk, Mendelssohn's Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor and Ravel's Piano Trio. There is more chamber music on 14 November when students from the Royal Academy of Music's wind and string departments performing chamber music. The programme includes Nielsen's Wind Quintet, Rossini's rather virtuosic Duetto for Cello and Double Bass and Brahms's Clarinet Quintet.
Further information from the Eaton Square Concerts website.
Then on 24 October, the Vasari Singers and conductor Jeremy Backhouse perform Allegri's Miserer, James MacMillan's Miserere, Parry's Songs of Farewell plus Gabriel Jackson's Requiem which was commissioned by the choir. On 7 November, the Trusler Carroll Wass Trio - violinists Matthew Trusler, cellist Thomas Carroll and pianist Ashley Wass - perform Copland's VItebsk, Mendelssohn's Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor and Ravel's Piano Trio. There is more chamber music on 14 November when students from the Royal Academy of Music's wind and string departments performing chamber music. The programme includes Nielsen's Wind Quintet, Rossini's rather virtuosic Duetto for Cello and Double Bass and Brahms's Clarinet Quintet.
Further information from the Eaton Square Concerts website.
Spitalfields Winter Festival
Labels:
preview
The Spitalfields Winter Festival runs from 6 to 17 December 2013 and presents a delectable series of offerings ranging from Britten and Handel to early plainchant and Perotin, with celebrations of Britten's centenary, and the Hilliard Ensemble's 40th anniversary. William Whitehouse's Orgelbuchlein project appears in the initmate surrounds of St. Peter's Ad Vincula in the Tower and there is even a musical feast!
Adrian Chandler and La Serenissima are bringing the Tale of Two Seasons programme which looks at two different years in Vivaldi's life and the way that his operatic and concerto work intermingled. (6/12). There is a chance to hear Bach's Orgelbuchlein in the intimate surroundings of the Chapel Royal in the Tower, with Bach's music played alongside contemporary works by Guy-Oliver Ferla, Vincent Paulet, Roxanna Panufnik, David Coonan, Francis Pott, plus music for voice and lute from Tim Travers-Brown and David Miller. (7/12)
Adrian Chandler and La Serenissima are bringing the Tale of Two Seasons programme which looks at two different years in Vivaldi's life and the way that his operatic and concerto work intermingled. (6/12). There is a chance to hear Bach's Orgelbuchlein in the intimate surroundings of the Chapel Royal in the Tower, with Bach's music played alongside contemporary works by Guy-Oliver Ferla, Vincent Paulet, Roxanna Panufnik, David Coonan, Francis Pott, plus music for voice and lute from Tim Travers-Brown and David Miller. (7/12)
Opera on to film - an encounter with Ian Russell
Labels:
interview
Lise Lindstrom as Turandot, Royal Opera House |
Ian Russell |
Opera is a multi-layered art: with the music you can enjoy it without understanding a word. When you add a layer of pictures, the language is still universal but there are more dialects. And when filming opera there is a world of a difference between making a film, where the film director is in complete control of all creative aspects and filming a theatrical performance. Here you are covering someone else's creative work and Ian feels you need to understand it and reflect this creative work on the screen.
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