Poet Richard Morris and his daughter, the artist and designer Hatty Morris, joined forces to produce an illustrated poetic re-telling of the story of Wagner's Ring Cycle (see my review). Now they have followed this up with another, this time produced One Crazy Day: the story of Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro. Richard Morris's verses telling the story of Mozart's opera are complemented with illustrations by Hatty Morris and Sayaka Takeuchi.
Richard Morris in his introduction sketches in the historical background to the opera. But as the opera is based on a Beaumarchais play, he also adds the very necessary pre-history from Beaumarchais' earlier play The Barber of Seville. He has written the poetry in terza rima which uses three-line stanza's with complex chains of rhymes. This gives the verse an onward, flowing quality as the middle line of stanza rhymes with the outer two lines of the next stanza. It also successfully avoids a rum-ti-tum quality in the poetry which would not sit well with the plot.
Tuesday 31 December 2013
January at the Barbican
January at the Barbican includes the BBC Symphony Orchestra in Colin Matthews, Shostakovich, Martinu and Max Richter. Visitors include Magdalena Kozena (with Les Violons du Roi) and Andreas Scholl (with the Academy of Ancient Music). The London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) and the Sixteen give you a chance to hear oratorios by both Handel and Haydn. And Sir John Eliot Gardiner joins the LSO for Mendelssohn and Schumann.
The BBC Symphony Orchestra continue their season with their new chief conductor Sakari Oramo performing Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 (Eroica), a new Colin Matthews work and Schumann's wonderful Konzertsuck for four horns and orchestra (8 January). Semyon Bychkov conducts them in Shostakovich's Symphony no. 7 (Leningrad) and Martinu's Concerto for two pianos with Katia and Marielle Labeque (16 January).
Perhaps the most intriguing event of January is the concert on 24 January when the BBC Symphony Orchestra, with Max Richter, conducted by Andre de Ridder perform Max Richter's Memoryhouse, which was originally an experimental album of "documentary music" combining ambient sounds, voices, and poetry readings. Richter never originally envisaged the work being performed live.
The BBC Symphony Orchestra continue their season with their new chief conductor Sakari Oramo performing Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 (Eroica), a new Colin Matthews work and Schumann's wonderful Konzertsuck for four horns and orchestra (8 January). Semyon Bychkov conducts them in Shostakovich's Symphony no. 7 (Leningrad) and Martinu's Concerto for two pianos with Katia and Marielle Labeque (16 January).
Perhaps the most intriguing event of January is the concert on 24 January when the BBC Symphony Orchestra, with Max Richter, conducted by Andre de Ridder perform Max Richter's Memoryhouse, which was originally an experimental album of "documentary music" combining ambient sounds, voices, and poetry readings. Richter never originally envisaged the work being performed live.
Monday 30 December 2013
January at Cadogan Hall
Labels:
Cadogan Hall,
preview
January sees John Lill continuing his series of recitals at the Cadogan Hall performing the complete Beethoven piano sonatas. On Jan 13 Lill performs numbers 9, 16 and 29 (Hammerklavier) and on 27 January her performs numbers 2, 8 (Pathetique), 24 (A Therese) and 30. The series culminates in February with a pair of recitals as part of Lill's 70th birthday celebrations.
The Academy of St Martin in the Fields returns for the second of their performance at Cadogan Hall on 22 January under their artistic director Joshua Bell. Bell with be directing Beethoven's Symphony no. 3 (Eroica) and performing Bach's Violin concerto in E major and Bach's Concerto for Two Violins (in which he will be joined by Harvey de Souza).
On 25 January the Pink Singers invite you to a night at the movies. Europe’s longest-running LGBT community choir will be joined by the London Gay Big Band for an evening of songs from the movies.
The Academy of St Martin in the Fields returns for the second of their performance at Cadogan Hall on 22 January under their artistic director Joshua Bell. Bell with be directing Beethoven's Symphony no. 3 (Eroica) and performing Bach's Violin concerto in E major and Bach's Concerto for Two Violins (in which he will be joined by Harvey de Souza).
On 25 January the Pink Singers invite you to a night at the movies. Europe’s longest-running LGBT community choir will be joined by the London Gay Big Band for an evening of songs from the movies.
Historically informed performance - historic voices?
Labels:
feature article
Final scene of The Flying Dutchman in Dresden in 1843 |
The Wagner and Verdi bicentenary has thrown up a small number of experiments in historically informed practice which have been revealing for the light thrown on Wagner's orchestrations. But, rather frustratingly, no-one seems to have been inclined to take this further and experiment with what types of voices Wagner might have actually heard. This was most notable in the enterprising recording of Wagner's original version of The Flying Dutchman by Marc Minkowski and Les Musiciens du Louvre Grenoble (see my review) where Minkowski cast as his Dutchman a singer known for his performances of the work in the modern opera house. Vocally this performance had its feet firmly in the 21st century.
Sunday 29 December 2013
Spring season at the Royal Academy of Music
Labels:
preview
The Royal Academy of Music's Spring season includes series devoted to Tippett's piano sonatas and string quartets, Mozart's chamber music along with the continuing series of Bach cantatas. Distinguished visitors include Oliver Knussen, Trevor Pinnock, Edward Gardner and Semyon Bychkov. The Academy Song Circle is very active and there is a chance to hear rarely performed music by Enescu, Skalkottas and Lou Harrison. Royal Academy Opera are performing Handel's Ariodante
In the David Josefowitz Recital Hall there is a programme of music by Georges Enescu devised by the current Hodgson Fellow, Marion Fischer-Dieskau (7/1/2014). The Academy Song Circle are performing a programme of Poulenc Songs (14/1), giving their annual Schubertiade (3/2), performing a Valentine's day concert (11/2), a programme entitled Songs of the Nightingale (5/3) and a programme of American Song (18/3). The Song Circle makes its annual appearance at the Wigmore Hall in a programme devoted to ten Goethe poems, each set by two composers including Beethoven, Brahms, Liszt, Loewe, Mendelssohn, Schubert, Schumann and Wolf
In the David Josefowitz Recital Hall there is a programme of music by Georges Enescu devised by the current Hodgson Fellow, Marion Fischer-Dieskau (7/1/2014). The Academy Song Circle are performing a programme of Poulenc Songs (14/1), giving their annual Schubertiade (3/2), performing a Valentine's day concert (11/2), a programme entitled Songs of the Nightingale (5/3) and a programme of American Song (18/3). The Song Circle makes its annual appearance at the Wigmore Hall in a programme devoted to ten Goethe poems, each set by two composers including Beethoven, Brahms, Liszt, Loewe, Mendelssohn, Schubert, Schumann and Wolf
Saturday 28 December 2013
Mozart's sacred music from New College, Oxford
Labels:
cd review
Having given us a superb disc of sacred music by Marc-Antoine Charpentier for their previous disc, Edward Higginbottom and the choir of New College Oxford have turned their attention to Mozart's sacred music for Salzburg Cathedral from the 1770's. Accompanied by the period instruments of Collegium Novum, Higginbottom and his forces perform Mozart's Litaniae Lauretanae K195, Sonata in C K329 and Vesperae de Dominica K321, again on the choir's own label Novum. The soloists are taken from the choir and anyone who has followed the choir's previous recordings will be heartened to see treble Inigo Jones's name against the soprano solos. Jones is joined by boy alto Michael Alchin, tenor Guy Cutting and bass Patrick Edmond.
Taking the soloists from the choir is simply one of a number of factors which indicate the amount of care and thought which have gone into this recording. The use of a boy alto, and having a mixture of boy altos and counter-tenors in the choir, means that the choral sound is closer to that of Mozart's day. The use of a boy for the soprano solos reflects that fact that many of Mozart's pieces were written for every day or only semi-state occasions. It was only when the Archbishop himself officiated that castrati from the court could be expected to join in.
In a note at the end of the CD booklet Higginbottom talks of the layout of the forces and how they, to a certain extent, duplicate the way the forces were laid out in Salzburg Cathedral. One area where Higginbottom is innovative is in omitting trombones. It was common at this period for trombones to double the three lower choral parts, but quite rightly Higginbottom views this as a way of keeping the choir in order in a large acoustic rather then anything more particular. Omitting them on this recording means that the choral texture has a finer grained transparency than it otherwise would. And with a choir as good as that of New College, you hardly need trombones to keep them up to the mark!
Taking the soloists from the choir is simply one of a number of factors which indicate the amount of care and thought which have gone into this recording. The use of a boy alto, and having a mixture of boy altos and counter-tenors in the choir, means that the choral sound is closer to that of Mozart's day. The use of a boy for the soprano solos reflects that fact that many of Mozart's pieces were written for every day or only semi-state occasions. It was only when the Archbishop himself officiated that castrati from the court could be expected to join in.
In a note at the end of the CD booklet Higginbottom talks of the layout of the forces and how they, to a certain extent, duplicate the way the forces were laid out in Salzburg Cathedral. One area where Higginbottom is innovative is in omitting trombones. It was common at this period for trombones to double the three lower choral parts, but quite rightly Higginbottom views this as a way of keeping the choir in order in a large acoustic rather then anything more particular. Omitting them on this recording means that the choral texture has a finer grained transparency than it otherwise would. And with a choir as good as that of New College, you hardly need trombones to keep them up to the mark!
Fascinating Aïda flaunt the rules
Labels:
by Hilary Glover,
South Bank Centre,
theatre review
Fed up of tinsel and want to forget
Christmas shopping or the sales rush? If you need a good solid belly
laugh to get you through the post Christmas slump, and you like you
humour dry, pithy, satirical, smart, and more than a little bit rude,
then Fascinating
Aïda’ ‘Charm Offensive’ is for you.
I went along just before Christmas Eve to see them at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the South Bank. Having only seen them on YouTube before (Cheap Flights) I was excited to see them - and they did not disappoint.
Fascinating Aïda are Dillie Keane, Adèle Anderson, and Liza Pulman. Dillie was a founding member of the group in 1983, joined by Adèle in 1984, so setting up a writing partnership which has lasted thirty years. Having been with them for ten years, Liza is the newbie of the group. All three have the strong musical and acting background, which along with their obvious talent and enthusiasm, make for a great show.
I went along just before Christmas Eve to see them at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the South Bank. Having only seen them on YouTube before (Cheap Flights) I was excited to see them - and they did not disappoint.
Fascinating Aïda are Dillie Keane, Adèle Anderson, and Liza Pulman. Dillie was a founding member of the group in 1983, joined by Adèle in 1984, so setting up a writing partnership which has lasted thirty years. Having been with them for ten years, Liza is the newbie of the group. All three have the strong musical and acting background, which along with their obvious talent and enthusiasm, make for a great show.
Friday 27 December 2013
Large voices and extra instruments - styles in performing baroque music
Labels:
feature article
In 1973, fresh out of university I joined the local choral society in the Scottish town in which I was working. They did a traditional repertoire including Elgar's Music Makers and Handel's Messiah which was the first work I sang with them. The conductor was a mature gentleman whose name I have forgotten. He talked about the period in the 50's when he was a young conductor. Conducting his first Messiah he was accused of knocking 45 minutes of the running time, though his speed would not seem outrageous today. The same gentleman also opined that the running time for Messiah could be gauged from the speed at which the chorus could sing the fast semi-quaver passages.
Nowadays it is difficult to remember that this style of performance was once the norm. Whilst modern choral societies sing Bach and Handel with a moderate stateliness, few I would imagine give it the massiveness which was common in pre-war Britain.
This applied to soloists as much as to chorus. The distinguished Wagnerian tenor, Walter Widdop had a parallel career in oratorio. English oratorio was a thriving business, in an era when few English singers had international careers; most sang oratorio almost exclusively. The soprano Isobel Baillie made very few operatic appearances, her status derived from her oratorio and recital appearances.
There is a story told about Walter Widdop, almost certainly apocryphal, that after a performance of Wagner at Covent Garden (Widdop sang both Lohengrin and Siegmund there), someone met him on a train travelling North. Widdop was complimented on his previous night's performance, but brushed this off saying he was going home to sing some proper music, Handel.
Nowadays it is difficult to remember that this style of performance was once the norm. Whilst modern choral societies sing Bach and Handel with a moderate stateliness, few I would imagine give it the massiveness which was common in pre-war Britain.
This applied to soloists as much as to chorus. The distinguished Wagnerian tenor, Walter Widdop had a parallel career in oratorio. English oratorio was a thriving business, in an era when few English singers had international careers; most sang oratorio almost exclusively. The soprano Isobel Baillie made very few operatic appearances, her status derived from her oratorio and recital appearances.
There is a story told about Walter Widdop, almost certainly apocryphal, that after a performance of Wagner at Covent Garden (Widdop sang both Lohengrin and Siegmund there), someone met him on a train travelling North. Widdop was complimented on his previous night's performance, but brushed this off saying he was going home to sing some proper music, Handel.
Wednesday 25 December 2013
Tuesday 24 December 2013
Bach's Christmas Oratorio
Labels:
cd review
As part of the Christmas Festival at St John's Smith Square, the choir of Trinity College, Cambridge, and the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, conductor Stephen Layton, performed parts one, two, three and six of Bach's Christmas Oratorio, with soloists Katherine Watson, Iestyn Davies, James Gilchrist and Neal Davies. St John's was filled with a capacity audience.
Bach wrote the work as a coherent entity, even though it was performed spread over six days during the Octave of the Nativity. Rather too long for a performance on a single evening, the solution of performing the first three and final parts worked well, giving us the bulk of the story and some of the finest music.
The choir has recently recorded the work with Stephen Layton, the OAE and a similar line up of soloists. At St John's the choir rather admirably performed from memory. There were some 40 singers and 28 instrumentalists, there were probably rather more performers than Bach would have anticipated. In the lively opening chorus, Jauchzet, frohlocket! there was a nice balance between chorus and orchestra. Though I have to admit that I have always found Bach's orchestration here, with its combination of flutes and trumpets, rather a triumph of expectation over experience.
Bach wrote the work as a coherent entity, even though it was performed spread over six days during the Octave of the Nativity. Rather too long for a performance on a single evening, the solution of performing the first three and final parts worked well, giving us the bulk of the story and some of the finest music.
The choir has recently recorded the work with Stephen Layton, the OAE and a similar line up of soloists. At St John's the choir rather admirably performed from memory. There were some 40 singers and 28 instrumentalists, there were probably rather more performers than Bach would have anticipated. In the lively opening chorus, Jauchzet, frohlocket! there was a nice balance between chorus and orchestra. Though I have to admit that I have always found Bach's orchestration here, with its combination of flutes and trumpets, rather a triumph of expectation over experience.
Welcome All Wonders
Labels:
cd review
David Bednall's Welcome all Wonders is a Christmas cantata for choir, organ and solo trumpet, relaying the Christmas story through a varied selection of texts both sacred and secular. The cantata was commissioned by the Queen's College, Oxford in 2011 and here recorded by the choir of the Queen's College, Oxford, director Owen Rees, trumpeter Simon Desbruslais and organists Olivia Clarke and Paul Manley.
In his programme note in the Cd booklet, Bednall talks about how the work was designed to be accessible, but not without challenges, and useful. So that each movement is complete in itself and can stand alone as an anthem. Bednall's choice of texts is imaginatively varied, with texts by Alexander Pope, Dora Greenwell (1821 - 1882), Mary Elizabeth Coleridge (1861 - 1902), Isaac Watts (1674 - 1748), John Milton (1608 - 1674), Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807 - 1883), Prudentius, Christina Rosetti (1830 - 1894), as well as biblical texts from liturgies both Roman Catholic and Orthodox.
Because of the well known nature of the story, Bednall has chosen not to knit these diverse elements together with a recitative. There is not Evangelist figure, no narration. This is, I think, a mistake. No matter how well known the story the narration would help to bind the work together. As it is, there is a danger that it turns into simply a sequence of well-made anthems.
Bednall's musical style here is relatively conservative, Howells and RVW seem to be models, but he also folds in chant as well as moments of harmonic spice. Overall the music is approachable and personable.
In his programme note in the Cd booklet, Bednall talks about how the work was designed to be accessible, but not without challenges, and useful. So that each movement is complete in itself and can stand alone as an anthem. Bednall's choice of texts is imaginatively varied, with texts by Alexander Pope, Dora Greenwell (1821 - 1882), Mary Elizabeth Coleridge (1861 - 1902), Isaac Watts (1674 - 1748), John Milton (1608 - 1674), Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807 - 1883), Prudentius, Christina Rosetti (1830 - 1894), as well as biblical texts from liturgies both Roman Catholic and Orthodox.
Because of the well known nature of the story, Bednall has chosen not to knit these diverse elements together with a recitative. There is not Evangelist figure, no narration. This is, I think, a mistake. No matter how well known the story the narration would help to bind the work together. As it is, there is a danger that it turns into simply a sequence of well-made anthems.
Bednall's musical style here is relatively conservative, Howells and RVW seem to be models, but he also folds in chant as well as moments of harmonic spice. Overall the music is approachable and personable.
Monday 23 December 2013
Bach Mass in B Minor at Kings Place
Labels:
concert review,
Kings Place
As the culmination of King's Place's year long exploration of Bach's music, Bach Unwrapped, there was a performance Bach's Mass in B Minor on Saturday 21 December 2013. The events of Bach Unwrapped not only explored Bach's music but different styles of performance. The Mass in B Minor was performed by the Aurora Orchestra (performing on modern instruments) and the choir of Clare College, Cambridge (director Graham Ross), conducted by Nicholas Collon with soloists Malin Christensson, Jennifer Johnson, William Towers, Joshua Ellicott and Benedict Nelson.
Though scholars postulate performances of Bach's Missa (the Kyrie and Gloria of the mass) and later of extracts from the full mass, we have no records and can only surmise the sorts of forces which Bach would have used. Joshua Rifkin has argued persuasively for performance one singer to a part, but this option does not appeal to everyone whilst being extraordinary taxing on the performers. Our modern tradition of performance of the work is linked to the baroque oratorio revival, so that the mass is performed with the sort of forces used in Handel's oratorios. Often on the basis of what it is presumed Bach would have used, if he had had the resources.
Whatever the forces used, for me there is an important moment in any performance of the mass which indicates whether the rationale used has been successful. In the first Kyrie, after the opening choral statement, there is a long instrumental fugue, to which the voices join. At this point it is important that the voices and instruments are equals, that the instrumentalists do not simply accompany the voices. Bach's writing here is multi-part, a texture mixing voices and instrument.
At Kings Place the stage was filled with the 29 instrumentalists of the Aurora Orchestra with the 32 singers from Clare College Choir placed on the balcony. Whether it was the relative numbers of the placing of the choir, I am not sure, but the choir had primacy; when singing they were dominant and the performance failed my key test.
Though scholars postulate performances of Bach's Missa (the Kyrie and Gloria of the mass) and later of extracts from the full mass, we have no records and can only surmise the sorts of forces which Bach would have used. Joshua Rifkin has argued persuasively for performance one singer to a part, but this option does not appeal to everyone whilst being extraordinary taxing on the performers. Our modern tradition of performance of the work is linked to the baroque oratorio revival, so that the mass is performed with the sort of forces used in Handel's oratorios. Often on the basis of what it is presumed Bach would have used, if he had had the resources.
Whatever the forces used, for me there is an important moment in any performance of the mass which indicates whether the rationale used has been successful. In the first Kyrie, after the opening choral statement, there is a long instrumental fugue, to which the voices join. At this point it is important that the voices and instruments are equals, that the instrumentalists do not simply accompany the voices. Bach's writing here is multi-part, a texture mixing voices and instrument.
At Kings Place the stage was filled with the 29 instrumentalists of the Aurora Orchestra with the 32 singers from Clare College Choir placed on the balcony. Whether it was the relative numbers of the placing of the choir, I am not sure, but the choir had primacy; when singing they were dominant and the performance failed my key test.
Sunday 22 December 2013
Veni Emmanuel - music for Advent
Labels:
cd review
This disc of music for Advent, Veni Emmanuel, from Graham Ross and the choir of Clare College, Cambridge, is centred on the great O Anthems,with the plainchant interspersed with motets whose themes relate to the text of the anthems. The result is a rather striking sequence for Advent, with music by William Byrd, Herbert Howells, Roderick Williams, Michael Praetorius, John Sheppard, John Rutter, J.S. Bach, Felix Mendelssohn, Peter Warlock, John Tavener and Sergei Rachmaninov.
They open with the plainchant hymn Veni, veni Emmanuel whose words paraphrase the texts of the O Antiphons. The chant is sung with firm flexibility by the whole choir. They follow this with a vigorous and flowing account of William Byrd's Vigilate from his 1589 Cantiones Sacrae, making quite a big sound, very much a choral performance, but with a great rhythmic feel. The result is rather thrilling.
The women then give a supple performance of the first O Antiphon, O Sapientia. The sentiments in the antiphon are echoed in Herbert Howells' anthem The fear of the Lord, written for Clare College in 1976, when John Rutter was the Director of Music. It is a big piece, starting with a striking organ introduction. The choir brings out Howells' colourful harmonies, the rich texture being giving plenty of spicy organ colour.
They open with the plainchant hymn Veni, veni Emmanuel whose words paraphrase the texts of the O Antiphons. The chant is sung with firm flexibility by the whole choir. They follow this with a vigorous and flowing account of William Byrd's Vigilate from his 1589 Cantiones Sacrae, making quite a big sound, very much a choral performance, but with a great rhythmic feel. The result is rather thrilling.
The women then give a supple performance of the first O Antiphon, O Sapientia. The sentiments in the antiphon are echoed in Herbert Howells' anthem The fear of the Lord, written for Clare College in 1976, when John Rutter was the Director of Music. It is a big piece, starting with a striking organ introduction. The choir brings out Howells' colourful harmonies, the rich texture being giving plenty of spicy organ colour.
Saturday 21 December 2013
Still two weeks to enter our competition
Labels:
Competition
There are still two weeks to go to enter our fabulous competition to win a champagne evening with Divas and Scholars at one of their History of Opera evenings, with a choice of subjects from six evenings on the history of opera with a variety of expert lecturers
and fabulous singers (with a glass of champagne!). The final evening
will be a lecture/recital from Nelly Miricioiu. Further information from our competition page.
Llandaff Cathedral plans to sack the choir
Labels:
news
Jacob Epstein's Majestas in the nave at Llandaff Cathedral |
Further information from the ISM website, and there is a petition in support of the choir at http://savellandaffchoir.weebly.com/.
Good Night Mr Tom
Labels:
by Hilary Glover,
theatre review
Goodnight Mr Tom Photography by David Sprecher |
The story follows the life of a
repressed and battered boy (William Beech) evacuated into the country
and billeted with a reluctant Mr Thomas Oakley. Taken in hand by an
irrepressible fellow evacuee (Zacharias Wrench – a bit of a
mouthful), William finds friends and a talent for drawing. But just
as he begins to come out of his shell, and Mr Tom finds his own
reclusive heart coming alive, William’s mother sends for him.
Back in London we see just how harrowing the abuse of Will by his deranged mother is, and the plot continues to get darker.
Handel's Messiah from Temple Church
Labels:
concert review,
Handel
BBC Radio 3's residency at the Temple Church in London for their Winter Festival finished in fine style with David Hill conducting the BBC Singers and St James Baroque in a performance of Handel's Messiah with soloists Ruby Hughes, David Allsopp, Robin Tritschler and Neal Davies (both Hughes and Tritschler are BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artists). This was a relatively small scale performance, 26 singers and 20 instrumentalists (including 11 strings), but the numbers were almost the maximum that the church could take and the performers were crammed into the narrow space of the nave. This meant that Hill was probably further from the choir than he would have liked, and those of us in the front of the audience were close enough to help out of the soloists got stuck, but this didn't seem to matter as all performers joined together to give us vivid and stylish performance
David Hill, one of the country's foremost choral conductors, has probably conducted more performances of Messiah than he cares to remember but this certainly did not show. He is very involved and involving as a conductor, clearly relishing and enjoying the music and conveying this to his performers. Being so close to the stage meant that we were able to see how finely tuned his conducting was, the remarkable detail of his instructions and clear enthusiasm. He was rewarded with a performance of remarkable consistency, with all four of the soloists and chorus having a strong commitment to the text.
Whilst Messiah does not have named characters, it is telling a story though this is sometimes lost in performances. The chorus has a big role to play here as well as the soloist and Hill elicited performances notable for the sense of drama and narrative vividness. But this was combined with a sense of style and a fine sense of line.
David Hill, one of the country's foremost choral conductors, has probably conducted more performances of Messiah than he cares to remember but this certainly did not show. He is very involved and involving as a conductor, clearly relishing and enjoying the music and conveying this to his performers. Being so close to the stage meant that we were able to see how finely tuned his conducting was, the remarkable detail of his instructions and clear enthusiasm. He was rewarded with a performance of remarkable consistency, with all four of the soloists and chorus having a strong commitment to the text.
Whilst Messiah does not have named characters, it is telling a story though this is sometimes lost in performances. The chorus has a big role to play here as well as the soloist and Hill elicited performances notable for the sense of drama and narrative vividness. But this was combined with a sense of style and a fine sense of line.
Friday 20 December 2013
The LSO wants to get you singing
Labels:
preview
In addition to it range of choral concerts (which includes Haydn's Creation and music by Peter Maxwell Davies, Scriabin and Beethoven), the London Symphony Orchestra has a range of Singing Days to get everyone singing. Each day is devoted to a particular work, starting with a workshop and ending with an informal performance with piano, and there are group discounts if you want to bring your friends or fellow choir members. There are workshops devoted to Haydn's The Creation with Simon Halsey (4/1/2014), Rachmaninov's Vespers with David Lawrence (25/1/2014) and Beethoven's Mass in C with David Lawrence (22/6/2014)
If you live or work in EC1 there is also an LSO Community Choir which performs regularly at the Barbican and LSO St Lukes, with rehearsals taking place on Monday evenings at LSO St. Luke's. There is no audition process but there is currently a waiting list, see the LSO Community Choir web page for details. For young people there is the LSO Youth Choir, which is open to young people aged 7 upwards that live or go to school in Hackney, Islington or the City. They also rehears at LSO St Luke's on Mondays. The next LSO Community Choir concert is Friday 22 March 2014 , and the next LSO Youth Choir Concert is Monday 31 March 2014.
If you live or work in EC1 there is also an LSO Community Choir which performs regularly at the Barbican and LSO St Lukes, with rehearsals taking place on Monday evenings at LSO St. Luke's. There is no audition process but there is currently a waiting list, see the LSO Community Choir web page for details. For young people there is the LSO Youth Choir, which is open to young people aged 7 upwards that live or go to school in Hackney, Islington or the City. They also rehears at LSO St Luke's on Mondays. The next LSO Community Choir concert is Friday 22 March 2014 , and the next LSO Youth Choir Concert is Monday 31 March 2014.
The city of rebellious delight: songs of protest in East London
Labels:
concert review
I should have been Christmas shopping
but ‘The
city of rebellious delight’ was too tempting. As part of
Spitalfields Music’s Winter Festival two local choirs, Women
Sing East and the Tubthumping
Chorus, joined forces to produce an alternative, more humanist
take on the Christmas message in the packed out Bishopsgate
Institute on Saturday14 December 2013.
For just over an hour on Saturday
lunchtime the two groups sang protest songs. Women Sing East has been
running for twelve years, and has strong links with Spitalfields
Music especially with the festival’s outreach programme. Directed
by Laka D they are always worth a visit. For this concert they joined
forces with one of the Bishopsgate Institute's resident choirs, the
Tubthumping Chorus led by Gitika Partington, and together they
‘defiantly’ explored songs of protest taken from the archives of
the Institute's library (set up in 1885). This included folk and
union songs, football chants, political marching songs, and songs
from the largest protests in British history.
In an appropriate gesture, given the
nature of the subject material, the choirs differentiated themselves
by dressing in either red or green, in clothes that represented their
personalities rather than formal concert attire. However even without
that the two choirs had quite different styles and different choices
of music. Women Sing East was accompanied by piano, double bass, and
drums lending them a slick stage-musical atmosphere, while the
Tubthumping Chorus was largely unaccompanied and had a rawer, out and
about, quality. Both were equally animated and matched in vocal
skill.
Thursday 19 December 2013
Belshazzar
Handel's Belshazzar is one of his strongest dramatic oratorios, setting what was possibly one of the best English oratorio librettos by Charles Jennens. Now William Christie and Les Arts Florissants have chosen the work to launch their new record label. Recorded following a series of live performances last year. A strong Anglophone cast includes Allan Clayton in the title role, Rosemary Joshua as his mother Nitocris, Caitlin Hulcup as Cyrus, Iestyn Davies as Daniel and Jonathan Lemalu as Gobrias with William Christie conducting Les Arts Florissants.
Belshazzar was something of a trial for Handel. He wrote the work in the summer of 1744, and was enthusiastic about Jennens' libretto, but wrote so much that the first act had to be severely retrenched which has perhaps left the act a little uneven in structure. But in this act Jennens gives us some magnificent moments such as the opening scene for Belshazzar's mother Nitocris contemplating the fragile destiny of Empire; Nitocris is almost entirely Jennens creation and by introducing her Jennes adds a far more human face to the drama.
Handel's problems did not stop there. For the season of 1744 to 1745 he attempted to put on a far longer subscription series than usual, this failed and he did not give the full number of performances that he planned. To cap it all, when he did perform Belshazzar in 1745 Mrs Cibber was ill which meant that a last minute re-arrangement of parts had to be made. When Handel revived it in 1751 he wrote extra music for the castrato Guadagni who sang the role of Cyrus in the revival, but as was Handel's way he did not necessarily revert to the original planned form. This means that there is a strong likelihood that Nitocris's opening scene was never performed in full during Handel's lifetime.
Belshazzar was something of a trial for Handel. He wrote the work in the summer of 1744, and was enthusiastic about Jennens' libretto, but wrote so much that the first act had to be severely retrenched which has perhaps left the act a little uneven in structure. But in this act Jennens gives us some magnificent moments such as the opening scene for Belshazzar's mother Nitocris contemplating the fragile destiny of Empire; Nitocris is almost entirely Jennens creation and by introducing her Jennes adds a far more human face to the drama.
Handel's problems did not stop there. For the season of 1744 to 1745 he attempted to put on a far longer subscription series than usual, this failed and he did not give the full number of performances that he planned. To cap it all, when he did perform Belshazzar in 1745 Mrs Cibber was ill which meant that a last minute re-arrangement of parts had to be made. When Handel revived it in 1751 he wrote extra music for the castrato Guadagni who sang the role of Cyrus in the revival, but as was Handel's way he did not necessarily revert to the original planned form. This means that there is a strong likelihood that Nitocris's opening scene was never performed in full during Handel's lifetime.
Fantastic Fantasio
Labels:
concert review
Brenda Rae and Sarah Connolly in rehearsal for Fantasio credit Russell Duncan |
In a brief history of Fantasio Jean-Christophe Keck describes why Fantasio was a flop at the time. Based
on Alfred de Musset's 1834 play it appeared to be doomed. Musset himself had
fallen out of popular favour and Offenbach’s reputation was
affected by the recent Franco-Prussian War (1870-1). A lack of
support from the co-director (Camille du Locle) of the Opéra-Comique
meant that Fantasio closed after ten performances.
Jacques Offenbach (1819-1880) born in
Deutz near Cologne studied at the Paris conservatoire (1833-7)1
and began playing cello at the Opéra-Comique
(1849-55). During this time he began to write operettas which he
called Bouffes Parisienes. Writing over 90 of these during the next
25 years including Orphée aux enfers (1858) and La belle
Hélène (1864), his career culminated in the well-known Les
contes d'Hoffmann (1877-80) which was produced only after his
death.
Wednesday 18 December 2013
Christ's Nativity in the snow
Labels:
preview
I am singing tomorrow (Thursday 19 December) in a concert being given by London Concord Singers at the church of St Botolph without Bishopsgate which is near to Liverpool Street Station. We will be singing Britten's early choral suite, Christ's Nativity, written when he was still a teenager. Alongside it we are performing Poulenc's wonderful Un Soir de Neige written in wartime Paris and setting poetry by Paul Eluard, plus music by Giaches de Wert, Hans Leo Hassler, Christobal de Morales, Agostino Soderini and Bach's Lobet den Herren. The concert starts at 7.30pm and you can buy tickets on-line at our Eventbrite page.
Tallis Scholars at the Temple Winter Festival
Labels:
concert review
The Tallis Scholars and Peter Philips are coming to the end of their 40th anniversary year and their 98th concert this year was at the Temple Church as part of the Temple Winter Festival on Tuesday 17 December 2013. The concert was broadcast live on BBC Radio 3, introduced by Sarah Mohr-Pietsch. The Tallis Scholars' programme gave us a variety of different composers' approaches to the Magnificat, with settings by Heinrich Schütz, Hieronymous Praetorius and Arvo Pärt along with music by Orlandus Lassus and Hans Leo Hassler.
All the music in the first half of the concert was written for double choir, with the 10 singers of the Tallis Scholars dividing into two four-part choirs. They opened with Omnes de Saba Venient by Lassus (c1532 - 1594) written towards the end of Lassus's long life. It started with a bang, and then developed into a beautifully constructed dialogue between the two choirs. The group sang with a fine sense of blend and smoothness of texture, but with a lovely feel for the rhythms in Lassus's work.
All the music in the first half of the concert was written for double choir, with the 10 singers of the Tallis Scholars dividing into two four-part choirs. They opened with Omnes de Saba Venient by Lassus (c1532 - 1594) written towards the end of Lassus's long life. It started with a bang, and then developed into a beautifully constructed dialogue between the two choirs. The group sang with a fine sense of blend and smoothness of texture, but with a lovely feel for the rhythms in Lassus's work.
Tuesday 17 December 2013
Cello for two
Labels:
by Hilary Glover,
concert review
Julian
and Jiaxin
Lloyd Webber played a romantic return to the Cadogan
Hall stage last night (Wednesday 11 December). Accompanied by John
Lenehan the concert was more than pleasant – with not a single
note out of place. All three performers were relaxed and genial,
chatting to the audience between pieces, swapping instruments, and
putting on a show as well as a performance. The choice of music and
general atmosphere transferred to the audience who also seemed to be
having a good time even though there were many empty seats.
Most of the pieces chosen for the
performance were originally songs. Webber complained that most two
cello music is ‘fodder’ and explained that the idea for this
concert had come from his 2012 CD produced to celebrate the death of
John Ireland (1879 -
1962) - on which John Lenehan also plays.
Webber believes that the sound of a
cello is the closet to the human voice and as such is the perfect
medium for exploring vocal music in an instrumental setting. Two of
the songs on the 2012 album were ‘virtually unknown’ two part
songs by Ireland re-set for two cello and piano. From there he and
Jiaxin researched and explored other songs and music which could be
re-invented for trio.
Poulenc's Carmelites at the Theatre des Champs Elysees
Labels:
opera review
Rosalind Plowright as Madame de Croissy in Poulenc's Carmelites at Theatre des Champs Elysees © Vincent Pontet/ Wikispectacle |
The set consisted of a dark wooden box with a false perspective. Screens could cut off the box at various points and the rear opened to reveal a landscape of bare trees. Trees, huge bare and black, formed the centrepiece of one of the screens which could slide into place. The production never passed out of the convent or the prison. The chorus (la foule) were always off-stage and the functionaries of the revolution (Jeremy Duffau, Yuri Kissin and Mathieu Lecroart) did many of their scenes from the auditorium. The scene between Mere Marie (Sophie Koch) and the Father Confessor (Francois Piolino) took place in the auditorium and Koch's Mere Marie watched the final action from there, unable to participate.
The setting was roughly 1930, costumes had a timeless elegance but with enough hints of period (for example the shortness of Blanche's skirt, the style of Mere Marie's hat in the final scenes and the military cut of the revolutionaries' greatcoats). The nuns habits were simple, but very elegantly cut.
Monday 16 December 2013
My Fair Lady at the Chatelet Theatre, Paris
Labels:
theatre review
My Fair Lady, the musical comedy by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe is a fascinatingly multi-layered work and Robert Carsen's production at the Chatelet Theatre in Paris emphasised this. (A revival of the 2010 production which was a collaboration with the Mariinsky Theatre in St Petersburg where the production was presented in 2011). We caught the performance at the Chatelet Theatre on Saturday December 14 2013. There was a predominantly British cast (Katherine Manley as Eliza, Alex Jennings as Professor Higgins, Nicholas le Prevost as Colonel Pickering, Donald Maxwell as Alfred P. Doolittle, Caroline Blakiston as Mrs Higgins, Ed Lyon as Freddy Eynsford-Hill and Lee Delong as Mrs Pearce) in a production directed by a Canadian, Robert Carsen, with designs by Tim Hatley (British), with an American conductor, Jeremy Rhorer, French chorus and orchestra, the Choeur du Chatelet and Orchestre Pasdeloup, in a work inspired by a Greek myth, based on a play written by an Irish playwright, Bernard Shaw, for an English audience which in turn went on to inspire an American musical.
One of my main reasons for attending the performance was that production use the original orchestrations by Robert Russell Bennett (revised by Philip J. Lang), giving the opportunity to hear a classic American musical with Robert Russell Bennett's full orchestral scoring rather than the smaller pit band common to most productions in London's West End.
One of my main reasons for attending the performance was that production use the original orchestrations by Robert Russell Bennett (revised by Philip J. Lang), giving the opportunity to hear a classic American musical with Robert Russell Bennett's full orchestral scoring rather than the smaller pit band common to most productions in London's West End.
Sunday 15 December 2013
Lawrence Zazzo and La Nuova Musica in arias by Handel, Bononcini and Ariosti
Labels:
cd review,
Spitalfields
La Nuova Musica |
Lawrence Zazzo |
Whilst Handel's younger contemporary Hasse has come in for something of a revival recently, the operas of Bononcini and Ariosti seem to languish. In a concert at St Leonard's Church, Shoreditch, on Friday 13 Decemer 2013 as part of the Spitalfields Music Winter Festival, counter tenor Lawrence Zazzo sought to rectify this by performing a programme of arias from operas by Handel, Bononcini and Ariosti from the 1720's, accompanied by La Nuova Musica directed by David Bates. The orchestra also played orchestral music from operas by Handel and Ariosto, as well as Corelli's Christmas Concerto.
Saturday 14 December 2013
The Academy of St Martin in the Fields celebrates Neville Marriner's 90th birthday
Labels:
news
In April 2014 Sir Neville Marriner is 90. Founder and Life President of the Academy of St Martin in the Fields (ASMF), a celebration of the conductor's birthday is a feature of ASMF's season next year. Still highly active as a conductor, Marriner will be conducting ASMF in a number of celebratory concerts starting with a birthday concert at the Royal Festival Hall on 1 April 2014.
On 1 April 2014 Marriner and the orchestra will be joined by the group's current artistic director, violinist Joshua Bell, for a performance of RVW's The Lark Ascending in programme which includes Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 20 with Murray Perahia (who is ASMF's principal guest conductor). Then on 20 May 2014 Marriner conducts the orchestra in a concert at St Martin in the Fields which includes Mozart's overture to The Marriage of Figaro and Symphony No. 24 plus RVW's Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis. The orchestra's celebratory season also includes concerts in Hamburg, Hanover and Munich.
On 1 April 2014 Marriner and the orchestra will be joined by the group's current artistic director, violinist Joshua Bell, for a performance of RVW's The Lark Ascending in programme which includes Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 20 with Murray Perahia (who is ASMF's principal guest conductor). Then on 20 May 2014 Marriner conducts the orchestra in a concert at St Martin in the Fields which includes Mozart's overture to The Marriage of Figaro and Symphony No. 24 plus RVW's Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis. The orchestra's celebratory season also includes concerts in Hamburg, Hanover and Munich.
Sir Neville Marriner with ASMF and Los Romeros (c) Mike Evans |
Friday 13 December 2013
Missa Solemnis
Labels:
cd review
Beethoven's Missa Solemnis is such a huge work, that performances tend towards the massive as if the theological concerns with which Beethoven was struggling could only be resolved by a chorus of thousands and slow tempi. On this new disc the Orchestre Revolutionnaire et Romantique numbers around 70 players, with 45 singers in the Monteverdi Choir, all conducted by John Eliot Gardiner in a performance which is lithe and vivid, but still with moments of transcendence. They are joined by a quartet of soloists notable for their flexibility of voice rather than scale, soprano Lucy Crowe, mezzo-soprano Jennifer Johnston, tenor James Gilchrist and bass Matthew Rose. Gardiner conducted a whole series of performances of Beethoven's mass last year and this disc is a live recording of the performance that they gave at the Barbican in October 2012, originally broadcast by BBC Radio 3 and now issued on Gardiner's Soli Deo Gloria label
Thursday 12 December 2013
Simon Rattle and Berlin Philharmonic residency
Labels:
preview
Simon Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic at the Barbican in 2011, photo Mark Allen |
The Hilliard Ensemble's 40th birthday party
Labels:
concert review,
Spitalfields
The Hilliard Ensemble - credit Marco Borggreve |
The first half was a typical Hilliard Ensemble assemblage, built around the seven great O Antiphons, the magnificat antiphons used at Vespers for the last seven days of Advent; wonderful pieces of plainchant which evocatively anticipate the coming of Christ. Each O Antiphon was followed by a pair of verses (one polyphony and one plainchant) from the Magnificat secundi toni by Tomas Luis de Victoria (c1548 - 1611). Woven into this mix were four motets. The Ave Maria of Josquin Des Prez (c1440 - 1521), Exordium quaruplate from Codex Specialnik (a volume which dates to 1546 and was used by the Protestant congregation in Prague), O magnum mysterium by Pomponio Nenna (1556 - 1618) and they opened with Viderunt Omnes by Perotin (fl.c.1200). The second half paid tribute to the group's first concert by including a work from that concert, Britten's Canticle IV: Journey of the Magi. To this were added motets by William Byrd (C1540 - 1623), Descendit de coelis and John Sheppard (c1515 - 1558), Laudate pueri Dominum and two 15th century carols. The programme finished with the premiere of Robert Marsh's Poor Yorick which had been commissioned for the occasion and was performed by all eight singers. Marsh was the composer of Il Cor Tristo which the group recorded on their latest disc (see my review)
Wednesday 11 December 2013
War and Peace - The Choir of Jesus College, Cambridge
Labels:
cd review
This new disc from the choir of Jesus College, Cambridge is entitled War and Peace: Music for Remembrance, with a selection of 19th and 20th century music, predominantly but not exclusively British, which reflects the theme of the fallen. Starting with Parry, there is music by Charles Wood, James MacMillan, John Ireland, Mark Blatchly, George Thalben-Ball, Matthew Martin, Geraint Lewis, William H Harris, Douglas Guest and RVW, plus Arvo Part, Johannes Brahms and Kirill Stetsenko.
What is interesting about the performers is that though billed as the choir of Jesus College, Cambridge directed by Mark Williams, we get two choirs for the price of one. There is the chapel choir, which is all male with trebles on the top line, and the college choir which is mixed, but the adult males are common to both choirs. On this disc both choirs perform and sometimes we get the combined choirs. They are joined by organists Robert Dixon and Benjamin Morris and trumpeter Rebecca Crawshaw.
Combining boys and women in the same choir is perhaps not obvious, but the boy trebles of Jesus College choir make a fine soft-grained sound (definitely not continental) whilst the young women in the sopranos have a nice light, clear bright sound. The result, in the opening item Parry's Crossing the Bar sung by the combined choirs, is a lovely light, bright clear sound; youthful with a lovely transparency. We get to hear the warmly attractive sound of the mixed voice College Choir in the next item, Charles Wood's Nunc Dimittis. Wood was a pupil of Parry's and became an important teacher (his pupils including RVW). Though he made several English setting of the Nunc Dimittis this version is for unaccompanied choir setting the Latin words and was commissioned for Westminster Cathedral Choir in 1916. It is a lovely richly textured piece, and the choir give a lovely vibrant but steady performance with nice interaction between the upper and lower voices.
What is interesting about the performers is that though billed as the choir of Jesus College, Cambridge directed by Mark Williams, we get two choirs for the price of one. There is the chapel choir, which is all male with trebles on the top line, and the college choir which is mixed, but the adult males are common to both choirs. On this disc both choirs perform and sometimes we get the combined choirs. They are joined by organists Robert Dixon and Benjamin Morris and trumpeter Rebecca Crawshaw.
Combining boys and women in the same choir is perhaps not obvious, but the boy trebles of Jesus College choir make a fine soft-grained sound (definitely not continental) whilst the young women in the sopranos have a nice light, clear bright sound. The result, in the opening item Parry's Crossing the Bar sung by the combined choirs, is a lovely light, bright clear sound; youthful with a lovely transparency. We get to hear the warmly attractive sound of the mixed voice College Choir in the next item, Charles Wood's Nunc Dimittis. Wood was a pupil of Parry's and became an important teacher (his pupils including RVW). Though he made several English setting of the Nunc Dimittis this version is for unaccompanied choir setting the Latin words and was commissioned for Westminster Cathedral Choir in 1916. It is a lovely richly textured piece, and the choir give a lovely vibrant but steady performance with nice interaction between the upper and lower voices.
Tuesday 10 December 2013
L'Elisir d'Amore at the RNCM
Labels:
preview
This week the Royal Northern College of Music is presenting Donizetti's L'Elisir d'Amore in the RNCM Theatre with Francesco Pasqualetti conducting the RNCM Opera Orchestra and Chorus. Pasqualetti studied with Sir Colin Davies and Gianandrea Noseda. The role of Adina is sung by 23 year old New Zealand soprano Bryony Williams with Nemorino by Chinese tenor Kang Wang. Both singer are currently studying for an RNCM International Artist Diploma.
The opera is directed by the RNCM's Head of opera Stefan Janski and designed by Lara Booth. There are performances 10, 12, 14 December, the performance on Thursday 12 December is conducted by Marco Bellasi, the RNCM's Junior Fellow in Conducting. Further information from the RNCM website.
The opera is directed by the RNCM's Head of opera Stefan Janski and designed by Lara Booth. There are performances 10, 12, 14 December, the performance on Thursday 12 December is conducted by Marco Bellasi, the RNCM's Junior Fellow in Conducting. Further information from the RNCM website.
St John's Smith Square 300th anniversary season
Labels:
preview
St John's Smiths Square presents an amazing variety of music in its concert programme for January to April 2014, in what is its 300th anniversary year. Lucy Parham starts her cycle of composer portraits, whilst Artur Pizzaro starts his cycle of Rachmaninov's piano music. The London Bach Society celebrates Bach's birthday, John Woolrich celebrates his 60th and John Tavener's 70th birthday weekend becomes a memorial. James Gilchrist has a Schubertiade. Young musicians include the Rodolfus Choir, Academia Musica Choir and the Young Musicians Symphony Orchestra. Other groups include the Orchestra of St. Johns, the London Mozart Players, the Chapelle du Roi, Polyphony and the Tallis Scholars.
Lucy Parham will be presenting all four of her composer portraits, mixtures of words and music in which Parham is joined by a roster of distinguished artists. Composers involved are Robert Schumann (Beloved Clara with Harriet Walter and Henry Goodman, 19/1/2014), Franz Liszt (Odyssey of Love with Joanna David and Martin Jarvis, 16/3/2014), Claude Debussy (Reverie with Simon Russell Beale, 19/10/2014) and Frederic Chopin (Nocturne with Juliet Stevenson and Alex Jennings, 23/11/2014). Each one takes place on a Sunday afternoon and is followed by a Q and A.
Lucy Parham will be presenting all four of her composer portraits, mixtures of words and music in which Parham is joined by a roster of distinguished artists. Composers involved are Robert Schumann (Beloved Clara with Harriet Walter and Henry Goodman, 19/1/2014), Franz Liszt (Odyssey of Love with Joanna David and Martin Jarvis, 16/3/2014), Claude Debussy (Reverie with Simon Russell Beale, 19/10/2014) and Frederic Chopin (Nocturne with Juliet Stevenson and Alex Jennings, 23/11/2014). Each one takes place on a Sunday afternoon and is followed by a Q and A.
Monday 9 December 2013
National Children's Orchestras at the Royal Festival Hall
Labels:
concert review,
South Bank Centre
NCO Under 13 Orchestra at the Anvil in Spring 2013 photo Alex von Koettlitz |
At the beginning of each half, as the young players walked onto the platform, the auditorium erupted in cheering and whistling. Both groups impressed with the confidence and seriousness of their demeanour on the concert platform, the confidence with which they undertook solos, and they way that the strings functioned smoothly as a single unit. You had to keep reminding yourself how young these players were.
Chapelle du Roi - Christmas at the Chapel Royal
Labels:
concert review
Having explored ancient and modern settings of the same texts in their previous Christmas concert, Alistair Dixon and Chapelle du Roi returned to their core repertoire for their 2013 Christmas concert. Christmas at the Chapel Royal at St John's Smith Square on 7 December 2013 saw the group performing Thomas Tallis's Missa Puer Natus Est Nobis as the centre piece of the concert. Based on the Christmas plainchant, Puer Natus Est Nobis (A boy is born to us), the mass referred not only to the nativity of Christ but to the possibility that the newly married Queen Mary I (Mary Tudor) was pregnant. The ensemble surrounded the mass with music by Tallis and his contemporaries, William Mundy, John Sheppard and William Byrd, many of the pieces with Christmas links.
The concert started with the group off stage, the men singing the chant Puer Natus est Nobis (the introit for the third mass for Christmas) which lead straight into the Gloria from Tallis's Missa Puer Natus Est Nobis. This survives incomplete and it was only after musicological research in the 1960's that the Gloria restored to a performable state (the Credo is still in fragmentary form). Musicologists can be reasonable certain that Tallis wrote the mass for Christmas 1554, because its unusual seven part layout (SSAATBB, with the tenors singing the cantus firmus based on the chant) and the rather narrow compass of the vocal parts suggests the participation of the Spanish chapel choir which had travelled to England with Prince Philip of Spain (Queen Mary's husband) and participated in Chapel Royal services (the Spanish chapel choir did not use high treble parts the way that the English did).
Philip of Spain and Mary Tudor |
Sunday 8 December 2013
The Flying Dutchman
Labels:
cd review
In 1841 Richard Wagner was in Paris, fleeing creditors in Riga and hoping to make some money. One of his schemes was a one-act opera for the Paris Opera, to be performed as a curtain-raiser to a ballet. (A substantial one, the opera lasts nearly 130 minutes). So Wagner set to work on what would become Der Fliegende Holländer. He wrote the libretto and the music for Senta's ballad and some choruses. These were shown to the director the Paris Opera, who rejected Wagner's work. Musical Paris of the 1840's shaped by Meyerbeer, Auber, Halevy and Donizetti was a world away from Wagner's ideas.
The Paris Opera did buy the synopsis for the opera from Wagner (he needed the money desperately) and whilst Wagner went on to write his opera anyway, the Opera had a French libretto created and given to Pierre-Louis Dietsch. Dietsch's opera was performed 11 times between November 1842 and January 1843, never to be seen again. Wagner's opera was premiered in Dresden in 1843. The rest, as they say, is history.
This intriguing combination was hit upon by Mark Minkowski as a project to celebrate Wagner's bicentenary. Minkowski and Les Musiciens du Louvre Grenoble performed both the Dietsch and Wagner's original 1841 version of Der Fliegende Holländer in concert in a double bill and recorded them in the studio in May this year. A fascinating combination of might have beens and what ifs. What if Wagner had written an opera for Paris in the 1840's!
The Paris Opera did buy the synopsis for the opera from Wagner (he needed the money desperately) and whilst Wagner went on to write his opera anyway, the Opera had a French libretto created and given to Pierre-Louis Dietsch. Dietsch's opera was performed 11 times between November 1842 and January 1843, never to be seen again. Wagner's opera was premiered in Dresden in 1843. The rest, as they say, is history.
This intriguing combination was hit upon by Mark Minkowski as a project to celebrate Wagner's bicentenary. Minkowski and Les Musiciens du Louvre Grenoble performed both the Dietsch and Wagner's original 1841 version of Der Fliegende Holländer in concert in a double bill and recorded them in the studio in May this year. A fascinating combination of might have beens and what ifs. What if Wagner had written an opera for Paris in the 1840's!
Saturday 7 December 2013
Les Apotheoses - Christophe Rousset and Les Talens Lyriques
Labels:
concert review
Christophe Rousset and Les Talens Lyriques returned to the Wigmore Hall on Friday 6 December for a concert which looked at the rivalry between the French and Italian musical styles in the late 17th and early 18th century. They performed Francois Couperin's Sonata from Premier Ordre: La Francoise from Les Nations, L'Apotheose de Corelli and the Apotheosis of Lully which concludes with the trio sonata La paix du Parnasse. Alongside these we had some of Lully's Trios pour le coucher du roi and Corelli's Trio Sonata in G op.2 No.12 'Ciaccona'.
Directed from the harpsichord by Rousset, Les Talens Lyriques consisted of Gilone Gaubert-Jacques and Gabriel Grosbard (violins), Jocelyn Daubigney and Stefanie Troffaes (flutes) Emmanuel Laporte and Jean-Marc Philippe (oboes), Catherin Pepin (bassoon), Laura-Monica Pustilnik (lute) and Francois Joubert-Caillet (viola da gamba). The music was all cast in trio sonata form, with the continuo selected from harpsichord, lute, viola da gamba and bassoon, with the upper two lines selected from the other instruments often in pairs and doubled in the larger scale sections. The result was to create a fascinating selection of textures and sounds.
Directed from the harpsichord by Rousset, Les Talens Lyriques consisted of Gilone Gaubert-Jacques and Gabriel Grosbard (violins), Jocelyn Daubigney and Stefanie Troffaes (flutes) Emmanuel Laporte and Jean-Marc Philippe (oboes), Catherin Pepin (bassoon), Laura-Monica Pustilnik (lute) and Francois Joubert-Caillet (viola da gamba). The music was all cast in trio sonata form, with the continuo selected from harpsichord, lute, viola da gamba and bassoon, with the upper two lines selected from the other instruments often in pairs and doubled in the larger scale sections. The result was to create a fascinating selection of textures and sounds.
Exploring Wagner and Parsifal
Labels:
news
Parsifal in Beijing, October 2013 |
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