Tallinn Chamber Orchestra in Studio 1 of Estonian Public Broadcasting photo Mait Juriado |
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on Apr 12 2015
Star rating:
New music for violins and string orchestra in a live radio broadcast
My last visit to Estonian Music Days in Tallinn saw me attending a live radio broadcast in Studio 1 of Estonian Public Broadcasting. Though the radio has a beautifully refurbished modern office (and I was privileged to get a trip round Klassika Raadio's 9th floor offices), the original post-war building (housing Studio 1) is still in use and about to be refurbished.
So on Sunday 12 April 2015, Tallinn Chamber Orchestra conducted by the young Latvian conductor Atvars Lakstigala performed a programme of music by Kristjan Randalu, Liisa Hirsch, Elis Vesik, Sander Pehk, Mariliis Valkonen, Helena Tulve and Kristaps Petersons with violinists Triin Ruubel and Juta Ounapuu-Mocanita. The music in the programme was mainly for strings, to which were added percussion at times. Though the programme was called Two Ladies there were in fact four violinists, as two of Triin Ruubel's young pupils Triin Piirsalu and Triinu Veissmann played Sander Pehk's piece as part of Mini-EMD. Remarkably, ALL the works in the programme were premieres.
We started with the premiere of Emigrane for string orchestra which was written in 2015 by Kristjan Randalu (born 1978). Using two contrasting ideas, vibrant polytonal chords and a more lyrical theme, Kristjan Randalu created a dynamic piece which had references to the style and genre of a variety of familiar string orchestral works.
Triin Ruubel and Juta Ounapuu-Mocanita, photo Mait Juriado |
Next Force of Nature for two violins and chamber orchestra, written in 2015 by Elis Vesik (born 1986) used lyrical material pushed to the edge with a lot of high writing and some non-pitched effects. Though there were clearly themes in the high intensity piece, it was as much about textures as thematic or harmonic development. A nervous fidgety piece which became quite violent and was very up front.
Atvars Lakstigala and Tallinn Chamber Orchestra photo credit Mait Juriado |
Juta Ounapuu-Mocanita was the soloist in Fulfilment for solo violin and chamber orchestra (strings and percussion), written in 2015 by Mariliss Valkonen (born 1981). This started with a vigorous solo accompanied by just tuned percussion, there was a quiet, sustained response from the strings and the piece seemed to develop as a sort of call and response with the string responding in a slow sustained way to the soloist's vigour.
Finally, after all the very up front works for solo violin(s) and orchestra, there was higher than the soul can hope and mind can hide for two violins, written in 2015 by Helena Tulve (born 1972). The work use lyrical expressionist motifs interweaving between the two violins, but there was also a use of silence making the work feel highly deliberate and highly thoughtful. After a few false endings, the two soloists ended up almost pitchless at the bridge.
Tallinn Chamber Orchestra - photo credit Mait Juriado |
This was a strong, though rather long concert (one hour 45 minutes, without interval but with short breaks for the announcer and for interviews with composers), with a group of very strong, very forceful pieces which seemed to allow little in the way of drawing the audience in, you had to work on each piece. It was a relief, towards the end, to come across Helena Tulve's piece which seemed to engage rather than demand, whilst the final work came as a feeling of light relief.
You can hear the concert for 30 days on the Klassika Raadio website (all in Estonian).
After the concert, another journalist from London (Gavin Dixon) and I were taken on a tour of the new Klassika Radio studios at the top floor of their newly refurbished building (with superb views despite the grey weather) and we did a short interview about the festival which will be broadcast next weekend.
This concluded my visits to the events of Estonian Music Days. Over the space of three days I had heard 24 pieces performed live (with 16 premieres), an incredible amount of music. And that wasn't all. Because of the festival programming, I was unable to get to the second concert on the Sunday. And that was one of the problems. In their eagerness to show the best of the vibrant Estonian new music scene, we were presented with rather too much music in concerts that were a little too long.
You can read about Day One and Day Two of my visit to Estonian Music Days on this blog.
Elsewhere on this blog:
- Well worth knowing: April Fredrick in lesser known songs by John Ireland - CD review
- Estonian/Polish collaboration: Estonian Music Days - day two - concert review
- Introducing a vibrant music scene: Estonian Music Days - day one - concert review
- Expanding the repertoire: Bamberg Symphony Orchestra and their encore project - interview
- Out of the parlour: Ben Johnson and James Baillieu - concert review
- Making music work: ISM Conference report
- Wild man of Hackney: ETO in rare Donizetti - Opera review
- Comic delight: The Dragon of Wantley - opera review
- Remarkable recapturing of the original: Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto from irill Gerstein - CD review
- Refreshing the parts others rarely reach: Celebrating 50 years of Orchestras Live - interview
- Charm & enterprise: Rebecca Clarke, Holst, Hovhaness, Bliss from Stankov Ensemble - Cd review
- Fascinating yet flawed: Brecht and Weill's Mahagonny - opera review
- Visual epic: Dara - theatre review
- Eastern inspiration: Felicien David's Le Desert - CD review
- Home
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