The Challenge of Change

The Beacon, Hastings, 30 April 2019

Hastings Philharmonic has launched an exciting new venture this spring which brought an enthusiastic gathering together at The Beacon for an evening of Poetry and Music. Under the banner of The Challenge of Change musician Marcio da Silva and poet Antony Mair approached the concept of change – but did so from very different perspectives.

The five musical items were drawn from the full range of Western classical music, starting in the modal world of Gregorian Chant and evolving through polyphony and classical harmony to the fractured discords of Luciano Berio. The focus was primarily on the way musical structure has changed over the centuries. While the notes and the voices remain essentially the same, the way the scores are organised becomes increasingly complex and demanding upon both the singers and the audience.  Hastings Philharmonic Chamber Choir, singing unaccompanied, demonstrated with considerable skill the intricacies of the writing as well as its emotional impact.

For the poets, change was a matter of content rather than form. The eight poets involved had been asked to draw on something from the canon and to use this alongside some of their own work to highlight different perspectives of change. The content itself was fascinating, ranging across having a baby, the menopause, ending a relationship, coming out to growing old. What may have been surprising was the apparent lack of any relationship to changes in the structure of verse over the last five hundred years as reflected in the music. The only item which could really be considered to be from the canon was Tennyson’s The Lady of Shallot, and even this was gently dismissed as old-fashioned. Though the content of many of the poems was engaging – Robin Houghton on menopause being particularly so, and Judith Shaw’s ending of relationships – it was difficult to assess how the poems worked as poems without seeing them on the page. As virtually everything, with the exception of Sandy Andrews’ Japanese verses, seemed to be in free verse, there was little sense of how poetry itself has changed in the way that music certainly has.

As an opening gambit this was a splendid evening and one worth repeating, if only to investigate more deeply the strong connections between music and verse, and perhaps the way in which poetic form affects musical structure.

 

OXFORD LIEDER FESTIVAL 2019

Tales of Beyond – Magic, Myths and Mortals

The 18th Oxford Lieder Festival (11 – 26 October 2019) inhabits a world of storytelling and fairy tales, from Norse legend to the Brothers Grimm, from the Grim Reaper to Greek myth. Concerts, talks and study days will explore life, death and the mysterious areas between and beyond, with other events including live magic, a film screening, a ghost trail and more.

World-leading singers appearing at the Festival include Louise Alder, Ilker Arcayürek, Benjamin Appl, Nikolay Borchev, Katherine Broderick, Stéphane Degout, Tara Erraught, Marcus Farnsworth, Maria Forsström, James Gilchrist, Ben Johnson, Sophie Karthaüser, Stephan Loges, Christoph Prégardien, Dorothea Röschmann, Katharina Ruckgaber, Ashley Riches, Carolyn Sampson, Thomas Oliemans, Kitty Whately and others, alongside pianists including Eugene Asti, Graham Johnson, Christopher Glynn, Matti Hirvonen, Hartmut Höll, Simon Lepper, Malcolm Martineau, Cédric Tibérghien and Roger Vignoles. Many of the most exciting emerging artists also appear.

The opening-night concert will be given by the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, with Camilla Tilling and Neal Davies performing orchestral songs by Schubert and Grieg. Roderick  Williams will be in residence for five days to perform Schubert’s three song cycles in the sparkling English translations by Jeremy Sams. There will be two world premieres from newly-appointed Associate Composer Cheryl Frances-Hoad, whose works will also feature throughout the Festival, as well as new commissions from composers Martin Suckling and Ross Griffey. Chamber music concerts include the Albion, Brodsky, Doric and Gildas Quartets, the Phoenix Piano Trio, and pianists Katya Apekisheva, Imogen Cooper, Ivana Gavri?, Charles Owen and Martin Sturfält. Choral music features with the Carice Singers and the Choir of Merton College.