Marrying Music and Science

Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music & Dance presents its 3rd biennial Royal Greenwich String Quartet Festival from 11 – 13 April, headlined by the world première of the award-winning composer Deirdre Gribbin’s new work Hearing Your Genes Evolve

 

Thursday 11 – 13 April 2013

Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich & Cutty Sark Performance Space

http://www.trinitylaban.ac.uk/gisqf

Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance presents the 3rd biennial Royal Greenwich String Quartet Festival from 11-13 April, headlined by the world première of the award-winning composer Deirdre Gribbin’s new work, Hearing Your Genes Evolve, commissioned by MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology at Cambridge University.

 

Leading string quartet, Quatuor Mosaïques will be performing together with Quartet Arcadia which won the prestigious Wigmore Hall London International String Quartet Competition 2012. The renowned Carducci Quartet, and the Benyounes Quartet will feature in the main concerts alongside the Smith Quartet, which will perform the première by Deirdre Gribbin in the iconic Cutty Sark Performance Space.

The Festival’s Artistic Director, David Kenedy, says:

“The string quartet’s extraordinary repertoire is arguably the most important form of classical chamber music making. Trinity Laban’s musical training teaches instrumental excellence as its basis, while ensuring that the learning we offer is at the 21st century conservatoire’s contemporary and cutting edge.

“This year’s Festival reflects the whole sweep of string quartet music through concerts, competitions, talks and masterclasses – from Quatuor Mosaïques, Haydn and Werner to the Smith Quartet, Deirdre Gribbin and evolving genetic theory – and offers a unique opportunity to support, promote and celebrate all that is exceptional about the genre among a new generation of musicians.”

Gribbin’s work is particularly noteworthy, as the artist says the genesis of the work draws inspiration from the possibility of using music to help non-scientists understand the principles of DNA and the genetic code.

Thursday 11 April

 

10:00-17:30: Chamber Music Bonanza, including visiting tutors from ChamberStudio

14:45-16:00: Talk – “Beethoven’s String Quartets” by Rob Cowan

16:30-18:00: Concert – St. Alfege’s Church, Greenwich

19:30-21:30: Arcadia Quartet – Chapel, Old Royal Naval College.

 

Friday 12 April

 

09:45-12:45: Carducci Quartet – masterclass

13:05-14:00: Benyounes Quartet and Christopher Guild, Beethoven Op. 18, No. 1, Schumann Piano Quintet – St. Alfege’s Church

14:30-15:30: Two Junior Trinity quartets and Greenwich and Lewisham quartets.

16:00-17:30: Trinity Laban String Ensemble and Benyounes Quartet. Elgar’s Introduction and Allegro, Schnittke: Moz-Art à la Haydn, for two violins and 11 strings and Shostakovich’s 8th Quartet – Chapel, Old Royal Naval College

19.30-21.30: Quatuor Mosaïques – “Fugue” concert: Werner, 3 Fugues, Haydn Quartet Op. 20. No. 5, Beethoven Op. 130 and 133 (Grosse Fuge) – Chapel, Old Royal Naval College

 

Saturday 13 April

 

10:30-16:30: Trinity Laban Intercollegiate String Quartet Competition

10:00-13:00: Quatuor Mosaïques – masterclass

10:00-11:15: Junior Trinity workshops

11:30-13:30: Carducci Quartet – masterclass

11:30-13:30: Junior Trinity Composers’ Workshop: “The Beethoven Connection”

17:30-18:00: Pre-concert talk – Genetic Science and Music/Genetics Ethics (Dr Sarah Teichmann/Deirdre Gribbin) – Cutty Sark, Greenwich

18:00-19:00: Smith Quartet – World Premiere – Hearing Your Genes Evolve (Deirdre Gribbin) – – Cutty Sark, Greenwich

19:30-21:30: Carducci Quartet Plus Concert: Britten, 3 Divertimenti; Mozart Clarinet Quintet with Daniel Vallejo; Beethoven String Quartet Op. 132 – St. Alfege’s Church. Greenwich

Charpentier: Medea

ENO, London Coliseum, 15 February 2013

Why has it taken so long for Charpentier’s only obvious operatic masterpiece to reach the professional stage in London? With a positive embarrassment of baroque performances these days, it almost looks as if the composer still suffers the same exigencies of fortune as he did in his own lifetime. Thankfully David McVicar’s production, in stunning sets and lighting, goes a very long to making up for this dereliction.

The opening two acts feel very familiar territory for David McVicar. We are in a rather over-comfortable aristocratic environment which talks much of war but seems keener on dressing for dinner than actually fighting. Brindley Sherratt’s De Gaulle-like Creon is matched by the American swagger of Roderick Williams’ Orontes.  That both come to a sticky end is inevitable from the start, though the opening acts are full of entertainment which might seem out of place taken by themselves, but are a complement to the desolation of the end. As such, the gilded aircraft and Lindy-hop dancing are entirely apt. This is a society running rapidly towards its own destruction.

In the midst of all the glib entertainment is Sarah Connolly’s intensely focussed Medea. An outsider from the start, appallingly treated by all around her, her vengeance is all the more comprehensible. At first she seems simply to be a cheated woman, lied to and abandoned, but we quickly realise the complex politics which surround her are a Gordian knot which needs a knife to unravel it. There are subtle hints of incest from the royal family which Medea plays on when she invokes the spirits.

The knife itself becomes an idée fixe in the final acts. There is little blood in evidence but the blade flashes at us with ominous intent. Sarah Connolly has a wonderful ability to stand absolutely still and yet command attention. While the world falls to pieces in act four she is static, almost unaware of the impact of her power. Most challenging of all is the conclusion. Where one might expect some sort of catharsis, and given the date of the work, some religious resolution, there is nothing. Medea literally rises above it all. She has destroyed those she loved, leaving Jason alone alive in agony, and she is drawn up to the stars. No punishment, no divine retribution. Death is the end and she has conquered.

The mirror floor of Bunny Christie’s vast palace set allows Paule Constable to create a series of stunning visual effects, ranging from the most subtle misty greys to golden watery reflections which spin out into the auditorium.

The Large cast is drawn from strength and the chorus are kept to the edges, allowing the many smaller parts to make individual impact. There are no weaknesses on stage and it is a tribute to ENO that they can cast so well. This is arguably the finest thing Sarah Connolly has done – one tends to think so far – and she is surrounded by splendid voices from Jeffrey Francis’ lyrical Jason, the richly nasty Creon of Brindley Sherratt and Katherine Manley’s vapid but ultimately tragic Creusa.

While I have to admit I could not get on with Castor and Pollox this Charpentier was as good as it gets.  BH