Prom 30: The Angry Planet

 

It is not often that we get the chance to hear 550 a cappella voices, so that even for the Proms this was something of a rare occasion. The BBC Singers and Bach Choir were joined by Children’s Choirs from London Boroughs, the National Youth Choir and the Great Baddow High School Signing Choir for performances of Flame by Ben Parry and the world premiere of Bob Chilcott’s The Angry Planet.

Flame is a setting of a poem by Garth Bardsley which takes up the Buddhist idea of a flame multiplying as it divides rather than growing weaker. The setting opens in almost plainchant mode and as the flame grows so does the intensity of the writing and the range of voices and vocal lines involved. The climax at so to light the world reminded me of the 40 part motet in its uplifting and swirling voices. It is a glorious outpouring and one which should be taken up by choral societies of any substance.

Bob Chilcott’s The Angry Planet tries, and for most of the time succeeds, in combining a wide range of styles to suit the wide range of available voices. The four sections follow similar patterns, opening with the denser and more complex writing for adult voices and then moving to a more approachable style with easy and highly memorable melodic lines. This structure is mirrored in the text by Charles Bennett which works in the opposite direction. The adults tend to have the more overt and obvious lines while the children’s text is frequently cryptic and puzzling.

The impact is impressive, and the text clear throughout. Gentle rocking rhythms support ideas of the sea and of destruction by water. The third movement includes a finely written solo for soprano – sung with ease and purity by Laurie Ashworth – and an effective use of the Latin requiem text as parts of the choir intone the list of recently extinct animals.

David Hill’s handling of the large forces was excellent throughout and both works conveyed a high level of professionalism from all involved.

Unfortunately this was more than can be said for the audience. A prom with children’s voices is not necessarily a children’s prom, and this one certainly wasn’t. Nobody appeared to have told the families in the audience. I had two babies close to me who vied with each other to see who could cause the most interruption and parents seemed to be allowed to wander in and out of the hall at will. It was all too obvious which families were related to those on stage as they chatted and passed food during the ‘adult’ sections of the score and only made any effort to listen when their children were singing. This might be acceptable for a school nativity but it is surely not so for an advertised Prom concert? I needed to listen to the recording on the radio of the third section once I returned, as most of the soprano solo was drowned out by crying from where I was sitting. We need young audiences, but we need young educated audiences, and this does not seem to me to be a good way to do it. BH

 

 

 

First International Composers Festival of classical music to take place in Hastings

On 24th and 25th of August, beautiful St Mary’s in the Castle on Hastings seafront will be host to the very first International Composers Festival. Conceived as a celebration of accessible and soulful classical music, the festival will feature a varied programme of concerts and talks. This unique event aims to bring together local and international composers and musicians to offer the public a fresh experience of contemporary classical music .

The festival will launch on Friday 24th August with an evening concert by the London Gala. Orchestra directed by Stephen Ellery and performing new works by Nigel Hess, Simon Proctor, Patrick Hawes, Nobuya Monta, Kevin Riley and Polo Piatti.

The 25th August features talks, discussions, networking opportunities and open rehearsals. A highlight will be the keynote speech “on Being a Composer” by the festival’s patron, renowned British composer Nigel Hess followed by a Question and Answer session.

Visitors will get a unique insight into the craft of creating classical music and have the opportunity to observe and question composers and musicians at work. The festival’s creator and artistic director, Anglo-Argentine composer Polo Piatti, now resident in Hastings, explains: “We are aiming to make contemporary classical music fully accessible by giving the public access to the creative process and by showcasing music that speaks to emotion, beauty and soul as opposed to the mainstream trend in classical music which has been to intellectualise it. We are especially pleased to have such a wonderful mix of well known and upcoming artists and that we are able to give a platform local and international talent here in Hastings. With the fantastic venue of St Mary’s in the Castle, we think this will be a truly special event.” The festival is aimed at ardent classical music lovers as well as those who may have shied away from it in the past. By providing a chance to experience it in an open and interactive context, the organisers especially hope to encourage young people to discover what contemporary classical music has to offer.

On Saturday, the festival will close with an evening concert with a performance by Hastings Philharmonic Choir as well as selected guest musicians and singers conducted by Stephen Ellery. A farewell party to celebrate what promises to be an exciting new part of the Hastings and south coast cultural scene will follow.

Tickets and more information about the festival and participants are available now via the website: www.composersfestival.com. There are day passes or a full festival pass, concessions for seniors and students and children under the age of 12 go free.

About International Composers Festival

Contact

Diana Wallis, Festival Director c/o Grosvenor Artist Management 98 High Street, Hastings, East Sussex TN34 3ES

Email: diana@composersfestival.com Tel: 07939 111 606 Polo Piatti, Artistic Director

polo@composersfestival.com Tel: 07725 163 929 www.composersfestival.com

 

 

Brighton Summer Schubertiade: 3

The Heath Quartet with Philip Higham, cello

St Andrew’s Church, Alfriston, 4 August 2012

The evening sunlight drifted through the west window onto the Heath Quartet just as they opened with Haydn’s Quartet Op 33 No4. It seemed apt, the warmth of the acoustic and the joy of the scoring mirrored in the softened glow of the nave.

This programme had a very different feel to it from that given at the start of the series in Brighton, which had been altogether more introspective. Even Gyorgy Kurtag’s 12 Microludes were easier to assimilate that the previous Moments Musicaux.

For the Haydn, the close proximity of the audience meant that the Largo could be played with the utmost delicacy and finesse, with no loss of impact. The Finale was strenuous without being over assertive.

Quite how the set of atonal pieces by Kurtag relate to specific semitones in the B to C scale was impossible to assess simply listening to the works, but they have a sense of integrity and power which the quartet conveyed with ease. The first and fourth pieces are almost non-existent dynamically in contrast to the outbursts of power and energy, however brief, in the sixth. Towards the end there is a very effective solo line for the viola, and before this there was a movement with some familiar Kurtag scittering energy.

After the interval we heard a sublime performance of a sublime work, Schubert’s String Quintet in C. This was perfect both for the culmination of the brief series and for a fine evening. If the trio section of the Scherzo seemed unexpectedly melancholic it was only because of the enthusiasm and joy which was to be found in the rest of the work.

These concerts were part of the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad but there are more events at St Andrew’s across the rest of the summer and they continue throughout the year. BH

All Saints, Hastings, Organ Series 4 Nigel Ogden

One of the joys of a series of concerts given by different performers on the same organ is the variety of styles and techniques each employs. Many of the large and appreciative audience would have known that Nigel Ogden would bring a very different approach to the other performances of the series. They were not to be disappointed.

The evening began in (almost) conventional organ recital mode with 2 familiar marches by Walton. True to form, though, Nigel presented them in what is sometimes now referred to as a mash-up beginning and ending with parts of Crown Imperial, with some of Orb & Sceptre in between. He next paired Bach’s Toccata in D minor with Alec Templeton’s Bach goes to town, demonstrating how easily he is able to move from one style to another. After a selection from German’s Merrie England Massenet’s Meditation from Thais allowed for a change of mood and a beautiful pared back registration complete with tremulant. A medley of music from Luigini’s Ballet Egyptian preceded an unashamed advertisement with a selection of music featured on 2 currently available CDs!

The second half opened in martial mood with a selection by Sousa. After this came a well thought-out arrangement of James Horner’s music from the film Titanic. It began with a most haunting introduction, leading into the well-known song My heart will go on through a dramatic sequence and ending with a subdued hymn tune Nearer my God to Thee.  Nigel really seemed at home in this and the rest of the programme as by now he had moved into full theatre organ mode.

A selection from Lehar’s The Merry Widow commemorated the diamond jubilee of the MGM film of the show. Following on from this was a highly inventive Gershwin medley that included a fair amount of swing as well as a late night jazz interpretation of Summertime. Nigel’s technical skills and awareness of the potential of this organ’s rich palette were to the fore as he ‘thumbed down’ (accompanying a solo line with the rest of his fingers on the same hand) and produced some beautifully reverberating timbres, at times reminiscent of a Compton melotone unit.

Further medleys of well known classics and songs from several decades (including most unexpectedly, Postman Pat) were all played with style, bringing the programme to an end.

Two encores followed. First there was a brilliantly cheeky set of short variations in different styles on When the Saints go marching in, ending with the melody in the pedals with a Widor Toccata-like accompaniment above.  Show me the way to go home brought this excellent concert to a (final) close. Once again  the organist Entertained. SP

 

Stephen Page – organ concerts

 

Stephen Page will give the second of his short series of afternoon concerts on the historic Snetzler chamber organ at Hastings Unitarian Meeting Place, South Terrace on Saturday 11th August at 2.30pm.

The concert will showcase a range of music in a variety of styles with works by John Stanley, JS Bach, Sweelinck and more recent composers. It will also feature a set of variations on Rule Britannia.

Details from spage999@btinternet.com

Next concert Saturday 13 October

1066 Choir & Organ

 

Bexhill and District Organists and Choirmasters Association met last night for their Annual General Meeting which may prove an important turning point in their history. They have adopted a new constitution and a new name – they are now

1066 Choir & Organ

welcoming any and all who enjoy organ or choral music, regardless of whether they are performer or enthusiast. Plans for events for the new season include a night at the Electric Palace Cinema for rare organ and choral films, a concert by composer and performer Tom McLeland-Young and a joint meeting with the Bexhill Hanoverian Society for A Day at Bath.

Following their very successful visit to Finchcocks Musical Museum earlier this month, a similar day visit is being planned for next summer.

Details of all events available from bhick1066@aol.com.

More Songs for a Summer Evening

CANTABILE with Molly Townson & Richard Eldridge

Guestling Church Saturday 7 July

‘More’ because last years’  Songs for a Summer Evening was so popular, ‘Cantabile’  the musical term  for singing sweetly, which is exactly what  Molly Townson’s fifteen sopranos, mezzos and contraltos did, filling Guestling’s historic edifice with music ancient and modern.  Not only sweet, however.  Spirited and softer by turns were the melodies penned by composers six hundred years ago and their counterparts today.

With Richard Eldridge’s unobtrusively supportive piano accompaniment and Molly giving the ensemble the assurance of her expertise the result was thoroughly appreciated by a capacity audience.

Elgar always gives us ‘a good tune’ as he revealed in As Torrents in Summer, and My Love Dwelt in a Northern Land.  Back-tracking to the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, 1570’s Sister Awake and 1557’s Sweet Nymph, Come to thy Lover were madrigals written to be sung without instrumental accompaniment. Sixteenth century pop songs?

From our great-grand-parents’ era came Song of Shadows, music by Essex-born Armstrong Gibbs, words a poem by Walter de la Mare, the two having a prolific working partnership, reverting to the traditional with Long Time Ago.

The guest artiste is invariably a ‘household name’ performer rarely in the first flush of youth.  This guest artiste was very different, Molly recognising her potential four years ago when aged seven she declared her favourite composer to be Mozart.  In a gold sequined dress and with Molly accompanying Katie Wren delighted the audience with lullabies by Schubert, Hugh Roberton and who else? Mozart.

The first half ended with Albert Malotte’s tuneful arrangement of the Lord’s Prayer.

The ever-popular Amazing Grace opened the second half, followed by four spirituals from the choir, before Molly revealed another string to her bow by diffidently introducing two of her own poems, both different, both delightful. The first reflected her thoughts on seeing a bed of anemones, then a host of bluebells in Guestling Wood, and the second, a graphic account of a visit to Canterbury.

Howard Goodall’s Love Divine and John Rutter’s Gaelic Blessing gave the choir the opportunity to show their prowess in modern mode.       

The  Reverend John Burgess thanked Molly and all concerned on behalf of Guestling St Laurence Church, the proceeds going to the Restoration Fund, before the evening closed on John Rutter’s gentle benediction, The Lord Bless You and Keep You. MW                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 

                                                                                                                                                                  

 

 

 

An Evening with Peter Katin

 

Etchingham Music Festival Thursday 12 July

The rain came down in torrents but Etchingham Festival’s devotees were not going to let that deter them from their annual treat by the Festival’s Patron Peter Katin whose expertise filled the ancient village church as aassuredly as it has filled concert halls from Carnegie Hall to the Melbourne Symphony.

Schubert was incredibly prolific, particularly considering his short life – he died aged only thirty-one.  The three Impromptus which opened the evening varied in approach.. The first in A flat, was contemplative, almost as though he had premonitions. The second in B flat was lighter, more familiar, the third in E flat varied from a serious opening note to a brighter finale. Beethoven is not a name immediately associated with Peter’s programmes yet the first notes of the Grande Sonata Pathétique emerged with high fidelity definition and total dedication. Slowly, solemnly as this was penned at the time when the composer was losing his hearing, then this changed. It grew lighter, brighter, the second movement a song without words, the third with moments of rapture falling away to a solemn finale.   Claude Debussy’s delightful Children’s Corner Suite of contrasting short pieces which opened the second half ranged from a lullaby through a serenade to a doll to dancing snowflakes and the finale of the Golliwog’s Cakewalk. All charming and painting a miniature in a few bars. Why is only this last regularly heard?   

To close were two works by the composer for whom the interpretation of his works Peter is justly world-famous, Chopin’s Nocturne in D flat and the No 3 Ballade in A flat minor. 

A sudden thought – has Peter in common with we lesser mortals a preference for flat keys above sharps? (A flat, B flat etc E flat etc rather than G major, D major, A major etc.) Perish the thought!  A secret which Peter keeps well and truly hidden. What does it matter as long as he continues to delight us with his genius? MW                                                                                                                                                                                             

                                                                                                             

 

 

All Saints Organ Concerts:

 

 David Flood  23 July

The most interesting parts of this concert came at the beginning and the end. The opening Tema met Variaties by H Andriessen brought us a full range of colour and some challenging, but not upsetting, harmonies. The encore – Fiat Lux by Dubois – had the most pleasing articulation of the evening and the most sparkle.

For much of the time in between the playing was proficient but rarely exciting. Bach’s Wedge Prelude and Fugue had little sense of emotional involvement in its phrasing and the registration lacked colour and dynamic. Guilmant’s March on a theme of Handel was effectively another prelude and fugue, with some rather aggressive use of the swell pedal. Mendelssohn’s Fourth Organ Sonata fared rather better with some fire and energy towards the end.

Franck’s Cantabile opened the second half followed by yet another prelude and fugue – this time Durufle’s reflective composition on the name ALAIN. It had some effective moments but the opening was lost within the depths of the instrument.

Flor Peeters Lied to the flowers is a gentle, fascinating work which requires a highly sensitive palate of tone colour. The pentatonic melody lines are beguiling but need a far softer registration than it was given here.

The finale from Widor’s sixth symphony made for an exciting close even if, by now, the impact of the concert had been lost. David Flood has played in Hastings a number of times previously and is known as a fine performer. Unfortunately this was not one of his strongest appearances. BH

Next Monday 30 July Nigel Ogden ‘Mr Organist Entertains’