BPO Summer Season: 2

Brighton Unitarian Church, 20 July 2014

If there was an air of the Pump Room in Bath on this very sultry afternoon please take the comment as a compliment. The string quartet drawn from the Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra opened with a delightful arrangement of Schubert’s Marche Militaire promptly followed by an even more winning rendition of Tchaikovsky’s Andante Cantabile from the first string quartet. If not quite as familiar to Classic FM listeners as the slow movement from the Borodin quartet, it had a richness of expression without any undue emotion which was totally convincing.

The afternoon concluded with Mozart’s Oboe Quartet, where the strings were joined by Alun Darbyshire who proved that he was more than a match for Mozart’s fearsome writing. A triumph all round.

Peter Copley

Between these we heard Peter Copley’s String Quartet No2, which had been composed for the Stanford Quartet in 2009. There were hints both in the introduction and from the composer that we might find this challenging. It is certainly a very serious composition, but Peter Copley was quite right to suggest that even difficult music can be fun. This certainly is, and for all the complexity of the writing, it is easy to assimilate on a first hearing – dare I say that is not always the case with new music!

The opening Molto vivace has a strong sense of purpose and direction, its regular triple stabbing chords punctuating the musical line and marking out the structure for our journey. At other times the line dances and leads like the Pied Piper. The Adagio is a genuine cantabile, the melody moving easily from one instrument to another. The movement has warmth and an integrity which is close to its Haydnesque roots. Following the idea of having fun, the scherzo starts as if it is going to be a folk song but this rapidly fragments, only to reappear and reform itself as the music progresses. There is a quintessential Englishness to this movement without any hint of pastiche or reference to twentieth century masters. The final Presto is a hell-for-leather skittering which can only bring a smile to any listener, its furious pace easily within the technical grasp of the quartet. The crunch with any new work is the question – would I like to hear this again? Yes, very much so, and it deserves recording as soon as somebody can be persuaded to do so. Let us hope there will be occasions to hear other works by Peter Copley.

Bexhill Organ Concerts

Stephen Page, Sackville Road Methodist Church

Wednesday 23rd April, 21st May and 18th June 2014

These lunchtime concerts were a new venture for Sackville Methodist church, and proved a great success. Welcoming coffee and biscuits greeted us, and on each occasion people were soon chatting companionably.  Friends were recognised from other Methodist churches, recitals Stephen had given elsewhere, and groups like 1066 Choir and Organ, and Joyful Noise Choir.

A hallmark of Stephen’s concerts is music from a wide range of periods and styles, giving variety and incorporating the unknown and the unexpected.  Each concert demonstrated the considerable potential and versatility of the medium sized 3 manual Sackville Road organ, and members of the congregation must have taken great pleasure in hearing it played to such appreciative audiences.

As always, Stephen added to our enjoyment by his careful crafting of the items into a balanced programme, and his well researched and sometimes humorous commentary.

One highlight came from the cover of a piece composed by J. Michael Watson for Edward VII’s Coronation, from which Stephen read an advertisement for Bile Beans, claiming to cure sundry ills from biliousness and constipation to stomach pains and excessive flatulence!

Every concert featured popular items like Sullivan’s The Lost Chord, Elgar’s Salut d’Amour and Robert Farnon’s Colditz; and much loved composers from Bach to Billy Mayerl.   We were stirred by Walton’s Three Pieces from Richard III, moved to reflection by Lemmens’ Priere, and found our toes tapping to The Clog Dance from La Fille Mal Gardee. This year’s centenary of William Lloyd Webber’s birth was celebrated with Verset No 4 and Epilogue no 4.

The inclusion of two piano pieces in each concert added further variety.  We were told that Jack Fina (Bumble Boogie) was regarded as having ‘the ten most talented fingers on the radio’; in both this item and in Monti’s Czardas, the dexterity and speed of Stephen’s fingers took our breath away and surely earned him similar acclaim!

We learned to expect and enjoy a medley of songs from the shows in each concert – Sound of Music, South Pacific, and Snow White – which always sent us on our way singing. People lingered talking at the end, and it became apparent that there was much discussion about a further series of recitals next year.  Stephen is known to care passionately about the future of church organs in Hastings and the surrounding area, and to be keen to support congregations who wish to protect, preserve and promote them – so it is to be hoped that he will be persuaded! CE