London Schools Symphony Orchestra

Barbican Hall, 7 January 2019

Inspired programming meant a whole concert full of powerful story telling which really showcased the ability of this massive band (102 named in the programme) of talented school-age young musicians from across London. It must be great fun for these young people to play Strauss and Wagner too – all of it dramatic, tuneful and not exactly short of passion.

The poise and maturity of LSSO players – all of them under 18 and some of them still very much children although most are mid teens – is striking. So is the discipline and training which has come through working with London’s Centre for Young Musicians which operates as a division of Guildhall School of Music.

We opened with Strauss’s Death and Transfiguration. Many a professional quakes at the prospect of the exposed opening entrusted to second violins and violas but these youngsters are (apparently) fearless and it came off with sensitive accuracy. The sound was rich throughout and I think this was the first time I’ve ever seen six harps on stage – a rare luxury but manageable, it seems, in a youth orchestra context.

Then it was on to Strauss’s Three Orchestral Love Songs – effectively a set of concerto movements for voice and orchestra for which the ensemble size was slightly reduced. It was announced at the beginning of the concert that soloist Rachel Nicholls was recovering from laryngitis but she still packed plenty of warmth, strength and feeling. What good experience, too for young players to be accompanying rather than taking centre stage. The rhythmic figure in Befreit Op39 No 4 1898 was especially well played.

Finally, after the interval we were off to Wagner-land for Twilight of the Gods: A Symphonic Journey. Arranged by Wigglesworth, this is, in effect, a musical summary of the last act of Gotterdammerung with Nicholls singing Brunnhilde’s Immolation (beautifully) at the end. Whether or not you’re a Wagner fan this is a splendid piece for young players to stretch themselves in. There is so much solo work and gloriously abundant opportunity for all those brass and percussion players to excel. The Siegfried horn calls were deftly delivered, the funeral march suitably noble and Wiggleworth’s fine control of dynamic contrast heightened the drama.

What these young players achieve is remarkable especially given their age. Many youth orchestras retain their players to 21 or so. Not this one. Leader Leon Human (lovely rendering of solos in the opening Strauss) is an A level student. It’s also a real joy to observe the audience LSSO attracts. Lots of young people come – from the schools that the players attend and from the Centre for Young Musicians. And of course families are there with siblings. If only we could find ways of getting such youthful and enthusiastic audiences for other classical music concerts.

Susan Elkin

New Year’s Eve Viennese Gala

Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra, The Dome, Brighton, 31 December 2018

The New Year concert is always a pleasure, and a highlight of the whole season, and under Richard Balcombe’s gently deft guidance it was as good as I can recall.

The familiar came up as fresh as ever – extended excerpts from Die Fledermaus and three pieces by Franz Lehar – alongside Strauss’ Explosions Polka and Suppe’s Morning, Noon and Night in Vienna. Another regular innovation was the inclusion of waltz music from Britain, opening with Robert Farnon’s Westminster Waltz and the nostalgic delights of Mantovani’s orchestration of Charmaine.

Soprano Ilona Domnich provided the operatic pieces. Her lower register does not have the impact of the top of the voice, which made for some difficulty of balance in the opening sections of Meine Lippen and Vilja, but the top of the voice is so strongly focused that the coloratura elements are thrilling. Her encore aria, Alexander Alabiev’s The Nightingale, proved to be the most captivating item of her repertoire.

The orchestra demonstrated the strengths of its individual performers with a fine cello solo in the Suppe and moving harp arpeggios in the hushed moments of the Gold und Silber waltz.

The first half concluded with the Emperor Waltz and the whole afternoon – inevitably – with the Blue Danube and Radetsky March to which we clapped with impeccable precision sans direction!

An impressively full house responded with enthusiasm throughout. Let us hope they are encouraged to come back for more.

The next concert brings cellist Thomas Carroll with works by Prokofiev, Schumann and Mendelssohn. www.brightonphil.org.uk

The inaugural BBC Proms Japan

 

The inaugural BBC Proms Japan announced

30 October – 4 November

BBC SSO and Thomas Dausgaard at 2017 BBC Proms credit Chris Christodoul.._

·         The first ever BBC Proms Japan with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and its Chief Conductor, Thomas Dausgaard

·         BBC Proms Japan marks the first time that the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra has toured Japan

·         Venues include Bunkamura Orchard Hall (Tokyo) and The Symphony Hall (Osaka)

The BBC Proms today announces that it will travel to Japan in 2019, as BBC Proms International continues to evolve following successful tours of Australia in 2016 and Dubai in 2017.

The BBC Orchestras and Choirs are the backbone of the BBC Proms each year and, as part of this remit, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra will take the spirit of the festival to audiences in Japan, marking the orchestra’s first ever trip to the region. Taking place from 30 October to 4 November in Tokyo and Osaka, the six-day festival will see Chief Conductor Thomas Dausgaard lead the BBC SSO in daily concerts covering a wide range of repertoire.

The festival will give local audiences the opportunity to experience the world-famous BBC Proms for themselves, with a rich programme including core classical repertoire, British music and new music, all accompanied by a full and varied schedule of learning activity in the region. It will feature many recognisable features of the BBC Proms, including the iconic First and Last Nights, featuring well-loved musical favourites and traditions. Full details of the programme will be announced in early 2019.

English National Opera launches free tickets for Under 18’s 

English National Opera (ENO) today (Tuesday 18 December) announces that anyone aged under 18 will get free tickets to ENO productions on Saturdays. The tickets will be for seats in the Balcony and be available for any or all of the 11 Saturday performances in the Spring 2019 season in the London Coliseum.

This scheme dramatically expands ENO’s audience engagement strategy and forms part of the company’s central mission to ensure the art form is accessible to everyone.

Children under the age of 16 will need to be accompanied by an adult. However, as part of the initiative, adults who pay full price for a balcony ticket can bring up to four children under 16 free of charge. Teachers bringing school groups can accompany up to 10 children under 16 and free of charge. Children aged 16 and 17 can be unaccompanied, and can book one ticket to each performance free of charge.

The applicable performances are: Akhnaten (23 Feb, 2 Mar); La bohème (2, 9 & 16 Feb); The Merry Widow (9 Mar, 13 Apr); The Magic Flute (16 & 23 Mar, 6 Apr)and Jack the Ripper: The Women of Whitechapel (30 Mar).

Bookings for free tickets can be made via the ENO Box Office phone line 020 7845 9218.

The balcony is widely regarded as having acoustically the best seats in the house. Additionally, the London Coliseum is unique in that all seats have unrestricted views of the stage.

ENO CEO Stuart Murphy said: “We were founded on the belief that opera is for everyone. We strive to continually stage opera of world class quality and bring it to as many people as possible. Removing cost as a barrier to entry for Under 18’s is a seismic leap forward for ENO and for opera as a whole, and we hope to entice as many Under 18’s as possible, from the musically obsessed, to the just plain curious. ENO is founded on passion and we want young audiences to feel alternately passionate, excited and transfixed. We can’t wait to welcome them to the London Coliseum.”

Hastings Philharmonic: Christmas Concert

St Mary-in-the-Castle, Hastings, Saturday 15 December 2018

St Mary’s full to the gunnels; Hastings Philharmonic on top form; Marcio’s O Holy Night – it has to be Christmas! But the heart of the evening was subtly different this year with a lot of unaccompanied singing of a more reflective nature after the breezy account of Malcom Archer’s arrangement of Angels from the Realms of Glory. The gently lyrical El Desembre Congelat was followed by John Rutter’s moving arrangement of the spiritual Rise up, shepherd, and follow. Marcio da Silva drew on the strengths of solo voices in the choir not only in the spiritual but also for the opening of In the bleak mid-winter and the voices of the kings in We three kings.

Ding Dong Merrily on High allowed the harmony to crystalize before a fine a cappella version of Mary had a baby. We have become accustomed now to Marcio’s loving rendition of O Holy Night but it still makes an indelible impression and led effortlessly into the section with Guestling-Bradshaw Children’s Choir. They joined all of us for Once in Royal David’s City adding a well-focused treble solo before two favourites of theirs – This Little Light of Mine and The Twelve Days of Christmas.  Children from the large audience made their way to the front to join in Away in a Manger before our final carol – O Come all ye Faithful. At key points throughout the evening we all joined in communal carols and it was a pleasure to welcome back Inspiritus Brass with their own approach to carols and Christmas songs. To ensure we didn’t drop off we were encouraged to do all the actions in Snow Waltz – and quite right to.

Before the concert proper started we heard three young violinists (one of them very, very young!) and at the end Marcio spoke about the establishment of a Violin school and scholarships for Young Singers to work with Hastings Philharmonic. With the continuing dearth of school music, community involvement is ever more important and any interested singers can find further details at www.hastingsphilharmonic.com

New Year’s Eve Viennese Gala – Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra

Brighton Dome, Mon 31 December, 2.45pm

Richard Balcombe makes a welcome return to Brighton as guest conductor for the Brighton Phil’s annual Viennese Gala, joined by the Russian-born soprano Ilona Domnich whose lyric coloratura will add sparkle to our afternoon with a selection of delightful songs and arias from well-known operettas and musicals from the 19th century and beyond. This is always one of our most popular concerts of the season and, now in its 29th year, is firmly established as part of the city’s festivities. We nearly sold out last year so if you would like to join us to see out the old year and welcome in the new, book your tickets now to avoid disappointment!

Originally destined to be a pianist, Ilona was plucked from a masterclass by legendary singing teacher Vera Rósza, and won the prestigious Wingate Scholarship to study at the Royal College of Music. She was chosen by Opera Now Magazine as one of their top ten high flying sopranos destined to have impressive careers, in which a personal highlight has been a masterclass with Montserrat Caballé. Ilona is also an actress and has developed and performed a one woman show based on songs sung by Marlene Dietrich, Jacques Brel and Edith Piaf.

As you would expect this concert will be a programme full of musical gems from the waltz kings of Vienna – the Strauss family – with an array of waltzes, marches and polkas from this talented musical dynasty who dominated the music scene in Vienna throughout the 19th century. Alongside these evergreen favourites Richard Balcombe has also included songs by Ivor Novello and Oscar Straus (no relation), Charmaine (made famous by Mantovani) and the Westminster Waltz by Robert Farnon. The full concert programme is available at: www.brightonphil.org.uk/concerts  

We are most grateful to the John Carewe Brighton Orchestra Trust for their continued support of the Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra and of our annual New Year’s Eve Viennese Gala.

 

Tickets £12.50-£39.50 (50% student/under18 discount, children just £1) are available from Brighton Dome Ticket Office, 01273 709709, www.brightondome.org

Discounted parking for concert-goers is available in the NCP Church Street Car Park – just £6 between 1pm and 6pm. Simply collect a follow-on ticket at the concert.

 

 

 

 

 

English National Ballet: The Nutcracker

London Coliseum, 13 December 2018

An Elkin Christmas is not complete without a good Nutcracker and a decent Messiah (latter next week although I’m not reviewing it). There are several Nutcrackers in town at the moment but this rather sumptuous offering from English National Ballet, first staged in 2010, more than ticks my boxes with its puppet theatre, hot air balloon and red-eyed mice.

I have long thought that Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker score is one of the most evocative ever written not least because of its sublimely colourful orchestration. Gavin Sutherland and English National Ballet Philharmonic make a pretty good job of delivering it, helped by the Coliseum’s generous acoustic. You can hear all the detail played from different corners of the pit from the pianissimo filigree string work in Waltz of the Flowers to the bass clarinet in The Dance of the Sugar Plum fairy. Every note is allowed to tell its own story.

This is a pretty conventional Nutcracker in that the framing device is firmly in place. We begin and end in Clara’s bedroom. Children (Tring Park School for Performing Arts) play the young Clara and Freddie. Others from Tring Park, who also form a choir, and young dancers from English National Ballet School appear in some of the ensemble scenes.

Rina Kanehara as the “adult” Clara looks very childlike but dances with mature assurance. Partnered by Fernando Carratala Coloma as the Nutcracker Prince, she is a compelling performer. Both dancers make leaps and lifts look effortless. Kanehara gets a spontaneous round of applause for her sustained pirouettes and her Sugar Plum lives up to its name. Coloma is immaculately lithe spending more time airborne than on the ground in his two Act 2 solo spots. I really admired their pas de deux too – charismatically danced against Tchaikovsky’s heavy brass alternating with piccolo.

There’s some lovely work from the corps de ballet in this production too with an especially attractive pink-tinged Waltz of the Flowers. Wayne Eagling’s choreography is particularly fresh and interesting here with lots of sweeping shapes and formations.

Amongst the set pieces presented by Drosselmeyer (Fabian Reimar – good) the exciting Spanish Dance stands out. And the Arabian Dance is as silkily seductive – leaning into the minor harmony – as I’ve ever heard it. Most of these dances were taken at sedate tempo which enhances the music but requires and gets even more control from the dancers than usual.

I’m struck too by the way the industry has progressed to enlightenment in recent years. No longer, it seems, is absolute uniformity of height and build imposed on female ballet dancers. Some of these women are taller than the men they’re dancing with and of course it matters not one iota. I smiled happily through every bar and step.

Susan Elkin

 

CDs/DVDs December 2018

Pierre Gaveaux: Leonore
Opera Lafayette, Ryan Brown
NAXOS 2.110591

While we can assume all readers will know Fidelio I doubt if many will know the earlier version by Pierre Gaveaux. What is immediately obvious is how quickly he deals with the emotional states of the characters, concentrating on the narrative rather than their inner life. Consequently the whole thing lasts less than ninety minutes and those glorious moments of introspection and emotional awareness with which Beethoven imbues his setting are here almost entirely missing. If that might imply this is not worth investigating then far from it as not only is it a perfectly workable opera in its own right (with some fine singing throughout) but also reminds us of how a genius can raise a basic story to a totally different level.

Verdi: I Lombardi
Orchestra and chorus Teatro Regio Torino, Michele Mariotti
DYNAMIC 37826

Less familiar than most of Verdi’s operas, this is a welcome addition and in a straightforward medieval production by Stefano Mazzonis di Pralafera. Angela Meade leads as Giselda with Giuseppe Gipali as Arvino and Alex Esposito as Pagano.

Mstislav Rostropovich: a film by Bruno Monsaingeon
NAXOS 2.110583

This film gives us an intimate portrait of the great cellist, with a wide range of contributors as well as additional tracks with previously unreleased performances of Tchaikovsky, Beethoven and Bach. For those who may only know him as a performer, his lifelong involvement in politics and society as a whole may be something of an eye-opener.

(Speak to me)  new music, new politics
Adam Swayne, piano
COVIELLO COV91818

With most cds the liner notes may occasionally be useful but too often they are little more than a list. Not so here. The works recorded can be played and certainly enjoyed by themselves but make far more sense when heard once one is aware of the context. Adam Swayne draws us in through Gershwin’s Preludes for Piano 1926, which are delightful and deceptively easy on the ear. We then move on to Frederic Rzewski’s Four North American Ballads. Here the underpinning folk tunes emerge just enough to feel we are keeping one foot on the ground before we are launched into Amy Beth Kirsten’s (speak to me) and Kevin Malone’s The People Protesting Drum Out Bigly Covfefe. If by this point we are beginning to feel a little overwhelmed Adam Swayne returns to Morton Gould’s indulgent Boogie Woogie Etude to bring things to a joyous conclusion. These days we are frequently encouraged to ‘go on a journey’ but in this case it certainly makes sense to do so, and enjoy the trip. The acoustic is also interesting as it really does sound like a large, if empty, concert hall.

George Antheil: Symphonies No 3 & 6
BBC Philharmonic, John Storgards
CHANDOS CHAN 10982

If you don’t know George Antheil this might come as something of a surprise. While modernism was in full flood, here was a composer who deliberately retains a close hold on tonality though never in a way which feels derivative or patronising. He has very individual voice, strongly within the American tradition but one which is immediately appealing. If in doubt, listen to Archipelago, written in 1935 with strong Latin-American rhythms and a real sense of joy.

Dvorak and Suk
Eldbjorg Hemsing, violin, Antwerp Symphony Orchestra, Alan Buribayev
BIS 2246

While the Dvorak violin concerto is well played it has a great deal of competition. Thankfully what makes the recording more interesting is the inclusion of Josef Suk’s Fantasy in G minor for violin and orchestra and an arrangement of his Liebeslied Op7No1. Less familiar they may be but they come up fresh and appealing here.

Divertimento Italian: Music for Harmonium and piano in nineteenth-century drawing rooms
Andrea Toschi, harmonium; Carlo Mazzoli, piano    
TACTUS TC 850004

Harmoniums are in such scarce supply these days and so rarely heard that the combination here sounds strange at first. There are many moments when the harmonium could be mistaken for a large accordion – for which many of the works here recorded could easily be arranged. Thankfully, the music itself is delightful and engaging, very much what would have been performed by amateurs on a quiet evening. Perhaps it might encourage some of that larger houses or chapels who have a lurking harmonium to dust it off and give it try with something other than gospel songs?

Thomas Tallis
Gentlemen of HM Chapel Royad, Hampton Court Palace, Carl Hackson
RESONUS RES10229

In time for Christmas, this is a pleasing disc of less familiar Tallis. The settings are all for lower voices and include the Missa Puer natus est nobis and the Mass for Four Voices. Recorded live in the Chapel at Hampton Court, the opening Suscipe quaeso Domine is particularly impressive.

Weiss in Nostalgia
Alex McCartney, Baroque lute
VETERUM MUSICA VM019

Sylvius Leopold Weiss was born is Silesia (now part of Poland) in 1686. As a professional musician he moved to Germany and ended his days in the court in Dresden. His work may be very familiar to professional lutanists but not so to a wider public. All the more welcome then this fine recording by Alex McCartney in a series which continues to impress.

Images of Brazil
Francesca Anderegg, violin; Erika Ribeiro, piano

I am not sure what I was expecting here but it was not quite what I expected. While covering a wide range of twentieth century composers and an equally wide range of styles it struck me that there was not really enough variety to engage the sympathetic listener quickly enough to retain the attention. Probably an enthusiast would find more in it than I regret I did.

Mandolino e Fortepiano
Anna Torge, mandolin, Gerald Hambitzer, fortepiano
CPO 555 112-2

Works by Jophann Nepomuk Hummel, Gabriele Leone, Porto Feliziano and Beethoven make up an eclectic but none the less enjoyable release. Using a mandolin of 1770 from Naples and a 1793 fortepiano from Munich, the sound is unique and intimate throughout. The Leone and Feliziano works are of particular interest as they sits quite comfortably alongside those of more familiar composers.

Sullivan: The Light of the World
BBC Concert Orchestra, BBCSO Chorus, John Andrews
DUTTON EPOCH 2CDLX 7356

I really wanted to enjoy this; I wanted to be able to say that the reputation Sullivan has for not writing anything worthwhile outside of the Savoy Operas was all wrong and here was the evidence. Unfortunately the reverse is true. No matter how good the singing and the strength of John Andrews conducting, there is nothing here that comes anywhere near the lighter works. The scoring sits uncomfortably between Mendelssohn and Stainer, and has neither the joy of the first nor the genuine emotional truth of the latter. Natalya Romaniw and Kitty Whately do what they can with their solos, but the chorus is often hamstrung by poor word setting and a lack of impact.

J S Bach:
Federico Colli, piano
CHANDOS CHAN 20079

The recording opens with the Partita BWV828 and moves through the familiar Concerto in the Italian style BWV971 to Busoni’s fine arrangement for piano of the Chaconne from BWV 1004. The notes include a lengthy essay by the performer analysing the transcendent relationship of the works to each other as a complete programme. This may not mean a lot to the listener, but could add to their understanding of what is in itself a fine set of performances.

Arvo Part and J S Bach
Jorgen van Rijen, trombone; Camerata RCO
BIS 2316

One would not normally put Bach and Arvo Part together, still less associate both with the trombone, but here Jorgen van Rijen makes a strong case for the combination. Part’s Fratres opens the recording and is surprisingly mellifluous, and this is followed by an arrangement of the concerto BWV 974 for trombone and strings. This pattern continues for the rest of an engaging if certainly unusual recording.