Friday, 27 March 2020
Arte Concert: Hope@Home, DG's Musical Moments
Labels:
on-line
The Arte Concert website is collaborating with a number of artists to create new content, recorded as private concerts and streamed on-line. The violinist Daniel Hope has started a new Hope@Home series with regular chamber music performances with friends which is being broadcast at 6pm Berlin time every night. The first episode, last night, featured one of Bach's violin sonatas with Hope and pianist Christopher Israel.
And now Deutsche Gramophon has announced that it is building on earlier impromptu events at Berlin's Meistersaal to have regular Musical Moments, starting tonight (Friday 27 March 2020) at 7pm and Sunday 29 March at 4pm, and the episodes will be available on the Arte Concert website. the first four episodes will feature Berlin-based artists Andreas Ottensamer, Anna Prohaska, Avi Avital and Albrecht Mayer in recital performances with chamber music partners.
Full details from the Arte Concert website.
LPOnline – Connecting through music
Violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter was due to perform Beethoven's Harp Quartet with members of the London Philharmonic Orchestra this week, but with the cancellation of performances the four performers, Mutter, Pieter Schoeman (violin), Richard Waters (viola) and Kristina Blaumane (cello), came together digitally to perform part of the work, each recording their own part at home. The result was streamed on the LPO's website last night (Thursday 26 March 2020) as part of a new digital initiative whilst concert halls are dark.
Further newly created live or 'as live' music making from LPO orchestra members, LPO’s Foyle Future Firsts Development Programme and the LPO Junior Artists will be available on-line as part of the new programme. And to mirror the orchestra's planned concert programme, playlists of the repertoire that was to be performed at that time at the Royal Festival Hall will be streamed on the orchestra's website with introductions from conductors and LPO musicians, giving their personal take on the music.
The first of these is Saturday 28 March 2020, when Edward Gardner introduces the first concert of the series. To listen, you will need a Spotify or an IDAGIO account but both of these offer free versions.
Full details from the LPO website.
The Leipzig Circle: piano trios by Schumann, Gade & Mendelssohn from the Phoenix Piano Trio
Labels:
cd review
The Leipzig Circle, piano trios by Robert Schumann, Niels Gade, Felix Mendelssohn; The Phoenix Piano Trio; STONE RECORDS
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on 25 March 2020 Star rating: 4.0 (★★★★)
Three composers linked by friendship are explored in this disc of piano trios from the 1840s and 1850s
On 31 October 1847, the Danish composer Niels Gade visited Clara and Robert Schumann in Dresden, with the news that Felix Mendelssohn was seriously ill in Leipzig. Mendelssohn died a few days later after a series of strokes; Schumann and Gade were pall-bearers.
This disc from the Phoenix Piano Trio (Sholto Kynoch, piano, Jonathan Stone, violin, Christian Elliott, cello) celebrates the links between the three composers who all came to know each other in Leipzig in the 1830s and 1840s. The links between Schumann and Mendelssohn are well known, but the presence of the Danish composer Niels Gade is more intriguing, yet when Mendelssohn died it was Gade who was seen as his natural successor in charge of the Gewandhaus Orchester. The Prussian/Danish war of Schleswig-Holstein put paid to that and Gade, returning to Denmark, would live until 1890, becoming a somewhat old-fashioned figure in the Wagnerian flush of the later 19th century.
The Leipzig Circle: Schumann, Gade & Mendelssohn from Stone Records features the Phoenix Piano Trio in Robert Schumann's Piano Trio No 2 in F major, Opus 80, Niels Gade's Noveletten, Op. 29 and Feliz Mendelsssohn's Piano Trio No. 2 in C minor, Opus 66.
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on 25 March 2020 Star rating: 4.0 (★★★★)
Three composers linked by friendship are explored in this disc of piano trios from the 1840s and 1850s
On 31 October 1847, the Danish composer Niels Gade visited Clara and Robert Schumann in Dresden, with the news that Felix Mendelssohn was seriously ill in Leipzig. Mendelssohn died a few days later after a series of strokes; Schumann and Gade were pall-bearers.
This disc from the Phoenix Piano Trio (Sholto Kynoch, piano, Jonathan Stone, violin, Christian Elliott, cello) celebrates the links between the three composers who all came to know each other in Leipzig in the 1830s and 1840s. The links between Schumann and Mendelssohn are well known, but the presence of the Danish composer Niels Gade is more intriguing, yet when Mendelssohn died it was Gade who was seen as his natural successor in charge of the Gewandhaus Orchester. The Prussian/Danish war of Schleswig-Holstein put paid to that and Gade, returning to Denmark, would live until 1890, becoming a somewhat old-fashioned figure in the Wagnerian flush of the later 19th century.
The Leipzig Circle: Schumann, Gade & Mendelssohn from Stone Records features the Phoenix Piano Trio in Robert Schumann's Piano Trio No 2 in F major, Opus 80, Niels Gade's Noveletten, Op. 29 and Feliz Mendelsssohn's Piano Trio No. 2 in C minor, Opus 66.
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| Phoenix Piano Trio (Sholto Kynoch, Jonathan Stone, Christian Elliott) at the 2016 Oxford Lieder Festival photo Tom Herring |
Thursday, 26 March 2020
Music for Mental Health: pianist Yulia Chaplina
Labels:
on-line
Like many artists, the pianist Yulia Chaplina has had a lot of concerts cancelled and her regular schedule has completely changed. She has started recording short online videos with some very light and positive (jazz and classical) music with the hope that the pieces can make you feel better. We all know that music is very therapeutic and provides a great boost for our mental health and Chaplina hopes her music will cheer you up!
You can sample a few of her videos on her web page, where there is a link to subscribe to her newsletter circulating the videos. And if you want some more 'hardcore' repertoire, then head over to her media page.
Pauline Oliveros' The World Wide Tuning Meditation: live, on-line on Saturday
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| Pauline Oliveros |
On four Saturdays, 28 March, 4, 11 and 18 April 2020 at 5pm EDT, Ione and Claire Chase will lead a global performance of The Tuning Meditation by the late Pauline Oliveros (1932-2016), a sonic gathering with a legacy of bringing communities together through meditative singing. Anyone from anywhere in the world is invited to join in via Zoom to sing together from their personal phone or computer.
No music experience is necessary.
Oliveros’ The Tuning Meditation consists of four steps:
1. Begin by taking a deep breath and letting it all the way out with air sound. Listen with your mind's ear for a tone.
2. On the next breath using any vowel sound, sing the tone that you have silently perceived on one comfortable breath. Listen to the whole field of sound the group is making.
3. Select a voice distant from you and tune as exactly as possible to the tone you are hearing from that voice. Listen again to the whole field of sound the group is making.
4. Contribute by singing a new tone that no one else is singing. Continue by listening then singing a tone of your own or tuning to the tone of another voice alternately.
Full information from Music on the Rebound website, where there is a RSVP link.
Always Playing: London Symphony Orchestra on-line
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| Sir John Eliot Gardiner and the London Symphony Orchestra (Photo LSO) |
Highlights further ahead include Valery Gergiev conducting Szymanowski's Symphony No. 1 and Violin Concerto (with Janine Jansen) on 2 April, Gianandrea Noseda conducting Verdi's Requiem with Erika Grimaldi, Daniela Barcellona, Francesco Meli and Michele Pertusi on 5 April, Sir Simon Rattle conducting Stravinsky ballets on 9 April, Semyon Bychkov conducting Mahler's Symphony No. 2 on 16 April, Simon Rattle conducting Mahler's Symphony No. 10 and Tippett's The Rose Lake on 23 April.
Full details from the London Symphony Orchestra's website, where you can find links to the orchestra's social media pages, as well as extensive digital programme notes for each of the concerts.
Wednesday, 25 March 2020
Voces8: Live from Home
The present situation is forcing artists and performers to be creative when it comes to creating on-line content. The VOCES8 Foundation has set up its #LiveFromHome initiative which will bring music and other content by Apollo5, VOCES8 and Paul Smith to your homes on a daily basis. They have put together a regular programme of performance videos, Interactive singing videos, workshops, and interviews which will be streamed live, and available via the archive.
The current schedule is as follows:
Wed 25 March - 2pm GMT - Creative Music Making, Paul Smith
Thu 26 March - 2pm GMT - The Weekly Interview: Roxanna Panufnik
Fri 27 March - 2pm GMT - APOLLO5 video – The Dark Island
Sat 28 March - 2pm GMT - Intonation: A Multi-sensory Experience Blake Morgan
Sun 29 March - 2pm BST - Sheet Music Editing Jonathan Pacey
Full details from their Facebook, Instagram and YouTube pages.
The current schedule is as follows:
Wed 25 March - 2pm GMT - Creative Music Making, Paul Smith
Thu 26 March - 2pm GMT - The Weekly Interview: Roxanna Panufnik
Fri 27 March - 2pm GMT - APOLLO5 video – The Dark Island
Sat 28 March - 2pm GMT - Intonation: A Multi-sensory Experience Blake Morgan
Sun 29 March - 2pm BST - Sheet Music Editing Jonathan Pacey
Full details from their Facebook, Instagram and YouTube pages.
Big Play - a film released every three minutes making a day of virtual celebration of children's music-making:
Labels:
music education,
online,
preview
On Friday (27 March 2020), schools across the West Midlands will be celebrating the Big Play, the virtual grand finale of Big Month of Music. Schools with whole class instrumental tuition have been working with their local Music Service to film One Minute of Music in their classrooms.
Over 150 films have been received and, between 9am and 5pm on Friday 27 March a One Minute of Music film will be released every three minutes on the West Midlands Music Twitter and Facebook pages.
A film about the Big Play will also be shown during the day and Young Ambassadors will be boosting the Instagram channel and doing social media takeovers throughout the day. Big Month of Music is the first major project of West Midlands Music, a collective of all 14 of the region’s Music Services, which is unique in the UK.
Over 150 films have been received and, between 9am and 5pm on Friday 27 March a One Minute of Music film will be released every three minutes on the West Midlands Music Twitter and Facebook pages.
A film about the Big Play will also be shown during the day and Young Ambassadors will be boosting the Instagram channel and doing social media takeovers throughout the day. Big Month of Music is the first major project of West Midlands Music, a collective of all 14 of the region’s Music Services, which is unique in the UK.
Eboracum Baroque invites to you a virtual Coffee Concert
The musicians from Eboracum Baroque are using technology to solve the problems of performing to an audience in a period of self-isolation.
On Friday 27 March 2020 at 1pm, they are offering a virtual concert using the meeting software Zoom. There will be solo music for recorder, violin, oboe, cello and trumpet by Bach and Telemann.
The concert will also be recorded and available on the group's YouTube channel later, for those that can't get to it.
More details on Eboracum Baroque's website.
Eboracum Baroque on YouTube.
On Friday 27 March 2020 at 1pm, they are offering a virtual concert using the meeting software Zoom. There will be solo music for recorder, violin, oboe, cello and trumpet by Bach and Telemann.
The concert will also be recorded and available on the group's YouTube channel later, for those that can't get to it.
More details on Eboracum Baroque's website.
Eboracum Baroque on YouTube.
Singing in Secret: The Marian Consort in Byrd's mass for four voices and propers for All Saints
Labels:
cd review
Singing in Secret - William Byrd Mass for Four Voices, motets; The Marian Consort; Delphian
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on 24 March 2020 Star rating: 4.5 (★★★★½)
Byrd's four-part mass forms the centrepiece of this powerful new disc from the Marian Consort
For someone who was a Roman Catholic in England at a time when it was proscribed, William Byrd wrote a remarkable amount of Roman Catholic music, two volumes of motets, the two volumes of Gradualia with music for all the services of the Church year, and three masses. What is interesting about the motets is that many of them do not set liturgical texts but instead use Biblical texts which would have had resonance for Byrd's fellow Catholics.
The new disc (released 27 March 2020) from Rory McCleery and The Marian Consort on Delphian, Singing in Secret explores these Roman Catholic resonances in William Byrd's music. Around a performance of Byrd's Mass in Four Voices, McCleery has placed the motets Miserere mei, Gaudeamus omnes, Timete Dominum, Ave Maria, Laetentur Coeli, Justorum Anime, Deo Gratias, and Beate mundo corde, ending with the large scale Infelix ergo.
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on 24 March 2020 Star rating: 4.5 (★★★★½)
Byrd's four-part mass forms the centrepiece of this powerful new disc from the Marian Consort
For someone who was a Roman Catholic in England at a time when it was proscribed, William Byrd wrote a remarkable amount of Roman Catholic music, two volumes of motets, the two volumes of Gradualia with music for all the services of the Church year, and three masses. What is interesting about the motets is that many of them do not set liturgical texts but instead use Biblical texts which would have had resonance for Byrd's fellow Catholics.
The new disc (released 27 March 2020) from Rory McCleery and The Marian Consort on Delphian, Singing in Secret explores these Roman Catholic resonances in William Byrd's music. Around a performance of Byrd's Mass in Four Voices, McCleery has placed the motets Miserere mei, Gaudeamus omnes, Timete Dominum, Ave Maria, Laetentur Coeli, Justorum Anime, Deo Gratias, and Beate mundo corde, ending with the large scale Infelix ergo.
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| The Marian Consort recording session at Crichton Collegiate Church (photo Will Campbell-Gibson) |
Tuesday, 24 March 2020
At home with LMP
Labels:
on-line
The London Mozart Players (LMP) has launched an on-line initiative, At home with LMP, which will provide a range of on-line context in the wake of the closure of live performances. The range will include solo performances from musicians associated with the group.
On Saturday, classical guitarist Craig Ogden launches the first of LMP's Saturday Sessions with a live-streamed recital including music by Scarlatti and Rodrigo. Also this week, the Marmen Quartet in Schubert, a conducting workshop from Hilaray Davan-Wetton and a family-friendly performance on Friday.
London Mozart Players and pianist Howard Shelley were due to perform the last concert of their 2019/20 Piano Explored lunchtime series at St John’s Smith Square on Wednesday 1 April. With the temporary closure of St John’s Smith Square, the concert will no longer take place, so instead LMP will be broadcasting an introduction from Howard Shelley – filmed from his own home – which will unpack Franz Xaver Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in E flat in his usual charming fashion, with excerpts performed to camera. The broadcast is planned to go live via LMP’s Facebook page at 1.05pm on Wednesday 1 April.
Full details from the London Mozart Players website
On Saturday, classical guitarist Craig Ogden launches the first of LMP's Saturday Sessions with a live-streamed recital including music by Scarlatti and Rodrigo. Also this week, the Marmen Quartet in Schubert, a conducting workshop from Hilaray Davan-Wetton and a family-friendly performance on Friday.
London Mozart Players and pianist Howard Shelley were due to perform the last concert of their 2019/20 Piano Explored lunchtime series at St John’s Smith Square on Wednesday 1 April. With the temporary closure of St John’s Smith Square, the concert will no longer take place, so instead LMP will be broadcasting an introduction from Howard Shelley – filmed from his own home – which will unpack Franz Xaver Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in E flat in his usual charming fashion, with excerpts performed to camera. The broadcast is planned to go live via LMP’s Facebook page at 1.05pm on Wednesday 1 April.
Full details from the London Mozart Players website
The Manchester Collective on-line: streaming, interviews, practice diaries & more
On Saturday, the Manchester Collective will be streaming its most recent show, Cries and Whispers, on Facebook. The show was filmed live at the White Hotel in Salford, and features music for string quartet by Jorg Widmann, Britten, Shostakovich and Gesualdo.
In the absence of performing live, the group is developing quite a lively on-line presence. Today (Tuesday), Elizabeth Alker (from BBC 6 Music/Radio 3) will be chatting to the group's chief executive Adam Szabo in Instagram Live, to discuss how artists are coping, how can we all continue to make music and what's the best way to discover new music online?
And on Twitter and Instagram Stories you can follow artistic director Rahki Singh's practice diary.
A particular place & time: Peter Sheppard Skaerved explores the 1685 Klagenfurt Manuscript with a contemporary violin by Antonio Stradivari
Labels:
cd review
Solo works from The Klagenfurt Manuscript; Peter Sheppard Skaerved; Athene
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on 23 March 2020 Star rating: 4.0 (★★★★)
Exploring a particular place and time, violinist Peter Sheppard Skaerved pairs at 1685 Stradivarius with an anonymous manuscript of the period, written by a Benedictine nun
This disc from violinist Peter Sheppard Skaerved on Athene, The Great Violins: Antonio Stradivari, 1685 - The Klagenfurt Manuscript, explores two areas of violin playing concurrently, he plays a 1685 violin by Antonio Stradivari and performs 96 movements from the Klagenfurt Manuscript, all music by an unknown composer from around 1685 for solo violin.
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on 23 March 2020 Star rating: 4.0 (★★★★)
Exploring a particular place and time, violinist Peter Sheppard Skaerved pairs at 1685 Stradivarius with an anonymous manuscript of the period, written by a Benedictine nun
This disc from violinist Peter Sheppard Skaerved on Athene, The Great Violins: Antonio Stradivari, 1685 - The Klagenfurt Manuscript, explores two areas of violin playing concurrently, he plays a 1685 violin by Antonio Stradivari and performs 96 movements from the Klagenfurt Manuscript, all music by an unknown composer from around 1685 for solo violin.
I have to confess that I had never heard of the Klagenfurt Manuscript until I came across this recording. The manuscript dates from the mid-1680s and was found in the Convent of St Georgen am Längsee in Carinthia, it is now in the collection of the Landesmuseum Kärnten, Klagenfurt am Wörthersee, Austria. The Convent dates from the 11th century but was re-built in the fashionable Baroque style in the mid-17th century, just before manuscript was written. But written by whom?
It is anonymous, as are most of the compositions by Benedictine nuns at the time, and we have to presume that it was written by a nun at the Convent, and the work seems to be a coherent single work by one composer. And, as Sheppard Skaerved explains in one of his articles in the CD booklet, the music is presented in a finely written and expressive hand by a single person whom, for various reasons including the types of error made, Sheppard Skaerved believes to be the composer herself.
One of the distinctive features of the movements is that many are written to be played scordatura, in alternative tunings of the strings. Thanks to his experiments playing the music, including to live audiences, Sheppard Skaerved has come to the conclusion that the reason for the alternative tunings was not just to make different types of musical figurations available, but to bring in different timbres and colours, because with an old instrument like the 1685 Stradivari, different tunings bring different pressures to the strings which affects the instrument's response and generates new ranges of colour and timbre.
The violin itself is quite a small one, commonly called a violino piccolo nowadays but really dating from a period before violins had become entirely standardised. It is now in the collection of historical musical instruments at the Royal Northern College of Music.
Vienna State Opera: on-line nightly
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| Richard Strauss: Die Frau ohne Schatten - Camilla Nylund, Evelyn Herlitzius - Vienna State Opera |
The operas are detailed on the company's website, so this week include L'elisir d'amore, La cenerentola, Tosca, Le nozze di Figaro and Götterdämmerung.
Perhaps the most interesting so-far scheduled is the performance for 1 April 2020, Richard Strauss' Die Frau ohne Schatten (performance of 10 June 2019), conductor: Christian Thielemann | director: Vincent Huguet, with Stephen Gould (Der Kaiser), Camilla Nylund (Die Kaiserin), Evelyn Herlitzius (Die Amme), Wolfgang Bankl (Geisterbote), Wolfgang Koch (Barak, der Färber), Nina Stemme (Färberin)
Monday, 23 March 2020
Updated: Nightly Met Opera Streams, a free series of encore Live in HD presentations
Labels:
preview
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| Sonya Yoncheva - Verdi's La Traviata - Metropolitan Opera in 2017 (photo Marty Sohl | Metropolitan Opera) |
The Nightly Met Opera Streams begin at 7.30pm local time (11.30pm UK time until the clocks change when it becomes 10.30pm) and remain on the Met website for 23 hours. The schedule for the forthcoming weeks is as follows:
This week is Wagner week, then next week begins with Poulenc's Carmelites.
Monday, March 23 – Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde
Conducted
by Simon Rattle, starring Nina Stemme, Ekaterina Gubanova, Stuart
Skelton, Evgeny Nikitin, and René Pape. Transmitted live on October 8,
2016.
Tuesday, March 24 – Wagner’s Das Rheingold
Conducted
by James Levine, starring Wendy Bryn Harmer, Stephanie Blythe, Richard
Croft, Gerhard Siegel, Dwayne Croft, Bryn Terfel, Eric Owens, and
Hans-Peter König. Transmitted live on October 9, 2010.
Wednesday, March 25 – Wagner’s Die Walküre
Conducted
by James Levine, starring Deborah Voigt, Eva-Maria Westbroek, Stephanie
Blythe, Jonas Kaufmann, Bryn Terfel, and Hans-Peter König. Transmitted
live on May 14, 2011.
Thursday, March 26 – Wagner’s Siegfried
Conducted
by Fabio Luisi, starring Deborah Voigt, Hunter Morris, Gerhard Siegel,
Bryn Terfel, and Eric Owens. Transmitted live on November 5, 2011.
Friday, March 27 – Wagner’s Götterdämmerung
Conducted
by Fabio Luisi, starring Deborah Voigt, Wendy Bryn Harmer, Waltraud
Meier, Jay Hunter Morris, Iain Paterson, Eric Owens, and Hans-Peter
König. Transmitted live on February 11, 2012.
Saturday, March 28 – Wagner’s Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg
Conducted
by James Levine, starring Annette Dasch, Johan Botha, Paul Appleby, and
Michael Volle. Transmitted live on December 13, 2014.
Sunday, March 29 – Wagner’s Tannhäuser
Conducted
by James Levine, starring Eva-Marie Westbroek, Michelle DeYoung, Johan
Botha, Peter Mattei, and Gunther Groissböck. Transmitted live on October
31, 2015.
Monday, March 30 – Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmélites
Conducted
by Yannick Nézet-Séguin, starring Isabel Leonard, Adrianne Pieczonka,
and Karita Mattila. Transmitted live on May 11, 2019.
Tuesday, March 31 – Rossini’s Il Barbiere di Siviglia
Conducted by Maurizio Benini, starring Joyce DiDonato, Juan Diego Flórez, and Peter Mattei. Transmitted live on March 24, 2007.
Wednesday, April 1 – John Adams’s Nixon in China
Conducted by John Adams, starring Janis Kelly and James Maddalena. Transmitted live on February 12, 2011.
Thursday, April 2 – Verdi’s Don Carlo
Conducted
by Yannick Nézet-Séguin, starring Marina Poplavskaya, Roberto
Alagna, Simon Keenlyside, and Ferruccio Furlanetto. Transmitted live
December 11, 2010.
Friday, April 3 – Bizet’s Les Pêcheurs de Perles
Conducted
by Gianandrea Noseda, starring Diana Damrau, Matthew Polenzani, and
Mariusz Kwiecien. Transmitted live January 16, 2016.
Saturday, April 4 – Verdi’s Macbeth
Conducted by Fabio Luisi, starring Anna Netrebko, Joseph Calleja, Željko Lučić, and René Pape. Transmitted live October 11, 2014.
Sunday, April 5 – Bellini’s Norma
Conducted
by Carlo Rizzi, starring Sondra Radvanovsky, Joyce DiDonato, Joseph
Calleja, and Matthew Rose. Transmitted live October 17, 2017.
Let the music play on: Bach against Corona
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| Benedict Kloeckner |
An uplifting way to share the music.
Available view Benedict's Facebook page
Live music streaming list
Bach Club TV is putting together a list of live-music streaming events on its website, and there is a link for you to add other events. Help create an on-line resource.
Islands and seasons: Tom Hicks in John Ireland and Tchaikovsky
Labels:
cd review
John Ireland Sarnia: An Island Sequence, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky The Seasons; Tom Hicks; Chatelet Records
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on 20 March 2020 Star rating: 4.0 (★★★★)
Two substantial works by John Ireland and Tchaikovsky form the basis for this engaging recital from pianist Tom Hicks
This new disc from pianist Tom Hicks brings together two very different suites for piano, both major works by well-known composers yet neither work is as known as it ought to be, John Ireland's Sarnia: An Island Sequence, and Tchaikovsky's The Seasons.
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on 20 March 2020 Star rating: 4.0 (★★★★)
Two substantial works by John Ireland and Tchaikovsky form the basis for this engaging recital from pianist Tom Hicks
This new disc from pianist Tom Hicks brings together two very different suites for piano, both major works by well-known composers yet neither work is as known as it ought to be, John Ireland's Sarnia: An Island Sequence, and Tchaikovsky's The Seasons.
John Ireland was a frequent visitor to the Channel Islands and was inspired by the landscape. He composed The Island Spell (from his 1913 set of piano pieces Decorations) when visiting Jersey in 1912. Then in 1940, shortly before his evacuation from the islands, which were occupied by the Germans during World War II, he started Sarnia: An Island Sequence. Composition continued in London, during The Blitz, and perhaps the evocation of his magical time in the islands was a counter to the realities of wartime bombing in London.
Sarnia consists of a trio of pieces 'Le Catioroc', 'In a May Morning' and 'Song of the Springtides' which lasts a little under 20 minutes. It is a distinctive and colourful score, in which some commentators feel Ireland was thinking orchestrally (the pieces have been orchestrated by Martin Yates), but here we have the piano originals.
A final Elegy: Richard Jeffrey-Gray at the Rieger organ of Clifton Cathedral
Richard Jeffrey-Gray made a final recording on the Rieger organ of Clifton Cathedral, on 19 March 2020, before services ceased as the result of the current emergency.
Rather aptly he chose George Thalben-Ball's Elegy which was apparently conceived as an improvisation to fill in time at the end of a BBC-recorded service during the World War II, and which Thalben-Ball dedicated to Walford Davis who preceded him as organist at the Temple Church in London.
The Royal Opera and the Royal Ballet on-line
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| The view from the main stage Orchestra Pit at the Royal Opera House © ROH/Sim Canetty-Clarke, 2014 |
- Peter and the Wolf, The Royal Ballet, 2010 – 27 March 2020, 7pm GMT
- Handel: Acis and Galatea, The Royal Opera, 2009 (Danielle de Niese, Charles Workman, Matthew Rose, Lauren Cuthbertson, Edward Watson, Steven MacRae, Eric Underwood, directed: Wayne McGregor, conductor: Christopher Hogwood) – 3 April 2020, 7pm BST
- Mozart: Così fan tutte, The Royal Opera, 2010 (Charles Castronovo, Troy Cook, William Shimmell, Sally Matthews, Nino Surguladze, Helene Schneiderman, directed: Jonathan Miller & this performance revived by him, conductor: Julia Jones)– 10 April 2020, 7pm BST
- The Metamorphosis, The Royal Ballet, 2013 – 17 April 2020, 7pm BST
More on-line content is planned by the Royal Opera House in the coming weeks, so watch this space.
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