Showing posts with label Corelli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corelli. Show all posts

Friday, 8 September 2023

Prom 68: Britten Sinfonia ablaze on the BBC Proms’ hottest night

Owen Gunnell (vibraphone)
Miranda Dale (violin)

7.30pm, Wednesday 6 September, 2023





Thomas Gould, Miranda Dale,
Caroline Dearnley & the Britten Sinfonia
© BBC/Mark Allen
Lera Auerbach (b.1973): Sogno di Stabat mater

 

Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713): Concerto grosso in F major, Op. 6 No. 2

 

Michael Tippett (1905-1998): Fantasia concertante on a Theme of Corelli

 

Max Richter (b.1966): Recomposed: Vivaldi – The Four Seasons

 

Encore:

Rune Tonsgaard Sørensen: Shine You No More, arr. for string orchestra


Thomas Gould & the Britten Sinfonia
© BBC/Mark Allen
Auerbach:
'The Britten Sinfonia strings gave their sinking lines intensity, and the solo strings riffed on Pergolesi’s suspensions, with sinister dark tutti throbbing gradually taking over'.


Corelli/Tippett:

'Bright and energetic Corelli flowed straight into Tippett’s Fantasia concertante, thereby accentuating Tippett’s gradual stretching and unhinging of the Baroque'.


'Gould was almost rotating on the spot as soloist and conductor, and communication between him and the mostly standing players was palpable throughout, their gently swaying movements transmitting their enjoyment and commitment'. 



Richter:

'Gould and his players were constantly alert to their corporate roles, producing some of the finest ensemble playing heard in a long time'.


'Once again, the criminally underfunded Britten Sinfonia (are you listening, ACE?) demonstrated inventiveness and frankly stunning performance commitment, giving other orchestral outfits much to envy'. 


Read my full review on Bachtrack here.


Monday, 12 June 2023

Bath Festival Orchestra inspires the next generation at Cadogan Hall


Peter Manning (conductor)

Pupils of Bobby Moore Academy, Newham, London

Cadogan Hall, London
7.30pm, Thursday 8 June, 2023






Bobby Moore Academy, BFO
© Nick Boston
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976): Serenade for tenor, horn and strings, song cycle, Op.31

Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713): Concerto grosso in F major, Op.6 no.2

arr. Harry Baker: Secrecy Surrounds 
with poetry by Nuala, Tizyana, Sophia and Alicia 

arr. Harry Baker: Music inspired by Louise Farrenc’s Symphony No 2 

Michael Tippett (1905-1998): Fantasia Concertante on a Theme of Corelli 

Britten: Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge for string orchestra, Op.10

Robin Tritschler & Ben Goldscheider
© Nick Boston
Britten Serenade:
'Goldscheider’s opening Prologue set the scene with commanding control and confident tone ... His athletic virtuosity in the demanding Hymn was matched ably by Tritschler’s nimble agility'. 

Corelli:
'The trio injected great energy in the faster sections, and there was good communication and enthusiasm from the whole team throughout'.

Bobby Moore Academy:
'Some strong, rhythmic pizzicato from strings, melodic wind playing and energetic brass, as well as lively percussion, all performed with impressive proficiency and drive. It was great to see such valuable work at the heart of the evening'.

Tippett:
'I have rarely heard a more insightful and tight reading of this work'.

Britten Variations:
'It was the Wiener Waltzer that stood out, with drunken swing, and balletic filigree from the violins on top'. 



Read my full review on Bachtrack here.

Friday, 14 June 2019

CD Reviews - June 2019

Pianist Adam Swayne’s first solo recital recording, ‘(speak to me) – New music, New politics’ is a fascinating exploration of American music ranging from Gershwin to a world premiere recording of Amy Beth Kirsten's (b.1972) (speak to me), which gives the disc its title.  In his liner notes, Swayne explains that the programme explores the relationship between popular music and political inspirations, in politically traumatic times (he cites Brexit and Trump as examples of this).  His technique throughout this challenging programme is highly impressive, particularly in the Four North American Ballads by Frederic Rzewski (b. 1938).  Rzewski was inspired by folk singer and activist Pete Seeger, and the four movements are based on popular American work and protest songs. There is great contrast here, between the harshly aggressive repeated rhythms of ‘Which side are you on?’ and the deceptively lilting ‘Down by the riverside’, with its increasingly menacing chromatic harmonies, before its development into a kind of boogie-woogie Bach conclusion.  The final movement, ‘Winnsboro cotton mill blues’ is positively terrifying, and the deafening, relentless sound of the mill builds to a frenzy.  Its wheeling blues riffs subside into moments of lighter blues reverie, but the overall feel is one of total tension.  In Kirsten’s (speak to me), the pianist is required to vocalise incredibly rapidly along with the dazzling, skittish rhythms on the piano in the opening movement, ‘Deceit’ – Swayne is startlingly impressive here.  The text here is ‘gibberish’, but there is an overall narrative, drawing on the story of Juno being tricked by Echo, before realising and ultimately removing Echo’s power of speech, with the final, extended voiceless movement, ‘Longing’ wandering through material from the first two movements in a kind of musing on this idea of taking away speech, a clear allusion to censorship.  Swayne creates a disturbing, slightly stifled atmosphere with almost constant pedaling muddying the waters beneath the birdlike fragments at the top of the keyboard.  In Kevin Malone’s (b.1958) ‘The People Protesting Drum Out Bigly Covfefe’ (another world premiere recording), the pianist is asked to wear and throw pink ‘pussyhats’ during the performance.  The Pussyhat Project advances women’s rights using arts and education, and here, Malone has transcribed chants recorded at anti-Trump rallies as the basis for his material.  Again, the challenges for the pianist are multiple, with massive crashing chords as well as jazz rhythms and wide leaps using the full extent of the keyboard.  At the work’s conclusion, recordings of the actual chants emerge over the top of the piano. He tops and tails the disc with Gershwin’s (1898-1937) Preludes for Piano, and Morton Gould’s (1913-1996) brief Boogie Woogie Etude.  The former are full of energy, and Swayne communicates their infectious spirit, and the latter provides a lively and impressive finale piece. An impressive display of phenomenal technique from Swayne in some striking and highly thought-provoking repertoire.

Various. 2018. (speak to me) New Music, New Politics. Adam Swayne. Compact Disc. Coviello Classics COV 91818.


Baroque music arranged for saxophone quartet? Well this won’t be everyone’s cup of tea, but those who have heard the Ferio Saxophone Quartet, or member Huw Wiggin’s solo performances at the Brighton Festival in recent years, will know that they are highly talented and communicative performers, and with this second disc for the quartet, they make a convincing case for their arrangements of Purcell, Bach, Handel, Corelli, as well as an earlier interloper, with Byrd’s Pavan and Gigue.  The majority of the arrangements were made by Iain Farrington (b.1977) especially for the Ferio Saxophone Quartet, and have therefore been recorded here for the first time.  A lot of the repertoire will be very familiar – movements from Handel’s Water Music, Preludes and Fugues and a Brandenburg Concerto from Bach, and Purcell’s Rondeau (used by Britten in his Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra).  In a way, perhaps because some of these ‘tunes’ are so familiar, it is actually refreshing to hear them presented in such a different way – this applies especially to Bach’s Air (somewhat destroyed for those of us of a certain age by a cigar advert). Inevitably, the saxophones’ mellow tones tends to create a homogenously smooth texture, but here particularly, Wiggins’ lyricism on the top melodic line is highly seductive.  They give a little more edge to point their lines in the fugues of two arrangements of Preludes and Fugues from Bach’s Das wohltemperierte Klavier, although again, there is an overall blended texture that tends to obscure the angular nature of Bach’s fugue melodies, particularly in the lower instruments.  Their Badinerie from Bach’s Suite No. 2 is full of energy and joy, and here their rhythmic incision is refreshing.  For Sheep may safely graze (from Bach’s Cantata BWV208), we return to smooth, lyrical textures, but here the contrast between the tenor line and the lilting soprano and alto duet on top is enchanting.  Their Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 fizzes along nicely, and the closing Allegro has an exhilarating bounce.  Handel’s Sarabande and three movements from his ‘Water Music’ follow.  The Sarabande is suitably mournful and stately, whilst the Hornpipe and Bourée are brassy and bright, and the aforementioned Pavan and Gigue from Byrd that follows is sensitively light.  The Adagio from Corelli’s Concerto grosso, Op. 6 No. 8 is sandwiched between another Bach Fugue, and Bach’s Italian Concerto to close the disc.  The Corelli again demonstrates the players’ abilities to make lines sing, with some beautifully sustained tone, contrasting well with the brief articulated central Adagio. The Italian Concerto to finish once again has energy and a lightness of touch, and the tenor line in the central Andante is mellow and lyrical, leading to a joyous Presto.  Whilst there is perhaps not as much stylistic variety on offer here as on their first disc, I was nevertheless won over by their warmth of sound, ability to communicate, and flawless ensemble throughout.

Various. 2018. Revive - Baroque arrangements for Saxophone Quartet. Ferio Saxophone Quartet. Compact Disc. Chandos Records CHAN 10999.

(Edited versions of the above reviews first appeared in GScene, June 2019)


The Surrey based chamber choir Excelsis, conducted by Robert Lewis has been joined by the London Mozart Players for a disc of sacred choral works by Clive Osgood.  The six movement Dixit Dominus that opens the disc has some rich string writing, with a particularly plaintive solo violin part in 'Virgam virtutis'.  Osgood effectively mixes relatively straightforward, lyrical settings with moments of more active rhythmic interest, such as in the lively 'Dominus a dextris'. The Exclesis singers make a strong sound, and their diction is always clear and precise, with solid tuning and smooth ensemble. They could perhaps be more nimble in the cascading lines of the closing movement, 'De torrente', but otherwise their command is assured.  Excelsis are joined by soprano Rebecca Moon for several of the works, including a highly effective setting of Beatus Vir, in which rich choral textures underpin Moon's souring lyrical line.  The more austere Hymn to the Word adds horns and harp to the orchestral accompaniment, contrasting fuller orchestral textures with passages of assured unaccompanied singing, and the work blossoms to a warm, more settled conclusion. The Peace of God, included in both settings for choir and piano, and choir and orchestra, is indeed peaceful, and the singers enjoy the smooth lines and warm harmonies, with tinges of the modern American styles of Lauridsen or Whitacre.  Brightest and Best on the other hand, with the choir joined again by Moon and the unnamed pianist, is more in Rutter territory, with its lilting triple-time rhythmic flow.  Miserere floats a high soprano solo line above the choral textures, with brief sections of chant delivered well here by the tenors.  Rejoice in the Lord Alway that concludes the programme is appropriately joyful, with brightness in its quirky addition of a solo oboe, and the singers and Lewis clearly enjoy the unpredictably offbeat rhythms.  Whilst a whole disc of choral works by a single composer does provide a good overview of their output, the downside is that there is a certain homogeneity of soundworld here, which is essentially lyrical, tonal and homophonic, with no major harmonic surprises, and seldom use of more polyphonic writing. However, many of the pieces here could be, and I am sure will be easily embraced by choirs of all abilities who are looking for new repertoire.  

Monday, 9 June 2014

CD Reviews - June 2014


Clarinetist Michael Collins continues in his partnership with pianist Michael McHale, bringing us the music of eight composers, spanning nearly one hundred years.  Some are lighter in character – the Canzonetta by Gabriel Pierné (1863-1937), the earliest work here, is a pretty, delightful piece, and the Solo de concours by Henri Rabaud (1873-1949), a conservatoire test piece, manages to squeeze a slow dance between a rhapsodic opening section and a highly virtuosic quick-fire close, all in under six minutes.  Debussy’s Première Rhapsodie was also a conservatoire test piece, but is an altogether more weighty affair.  He later made a version for clarinet and orchestra, and it is somewhat reminiscent of his earlier Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune, for flute and orchestra, with the same sense of languid lyricism and dreamlike fantasy.  The latest work here is Time Pieces by Robert Muczynski (1929-2010).  Its four movements each focus on a different characteristic of the clarinet, such as the soft, lyrical tones required in the slow movement, quirky folk style in the third, and lively jazz rhythms in the final movement.  Bohuslav Martinů’s (1890-1959) Sonatina is full of complex rhythmic devices, as well as hints of Czech folkdance, and its finale is a joyous celebration, testing the clarinet’s flexibility to its limits, with wild leaps and real bravado. Jazz is here too, as it is in Leonard Bernstein’s (1918-1990) Sonata, his first published piece, and Collins and McHale bring to life its Hindemith-influenced cerebral first movement, the warmer more songlike writing of the second movement, and the jazz style of the finale.  As ever, Collins’ command of the technical requirements is faultless – as is McHale’s command of the often equally demanding accompaniments (particularly in the Martinů).  A great survey of music perhaps otherwise only known by clarinetists.
Baroque violinist Johannes Pramsohler has carved out an innovative and successful career in a very short time, and has now even launched his own music label, Audax Records, to produce his and other recordings.  I first came across him when he led the International Baroque Players in a concert with Emma Kirkby (when I sang with BREMF Consort of Voices in choruses from Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas), and was blown away by the energy and life in the performance from Pramsohler and the young players.  His first recital disc on his own label is of a varied range of Sonatas for violin and basso continuo, and he is joined by Philippe Grisvard on harpsichord. They begin with Corelli (1653-1713), and the first Sonata from his highly influential Op. 5 set from 1700.  The opening of this Sonata demands attention with its declamatory opening, and Pramsohler sets the tone immediately for what proves to be a remarkably engaging recital.  Again, there is incredible energy here, making this sound like a live recital.  However, it is the Telemann (1681-1767) Sonata which follows that was real revelation for me.  I have always found Telemann somehow lacking in something, and rather pedestrian, but here again there is great spirit in Pramsohler and Grisvard’s approach, which really brings the music alive.  Yet that is not to say that the performers lack sensitivity or subtlety – the opening movement of the Telemann has such poise and grace, which makes the contrast with the lively Vivace that follows all the more delightful.  Ornamentation throughout is elaborate yet tasteful, and this is underpinned throughout by sure-footed accompaniment from the harpsichord.  Jean-Marie Leclair’s (1697-1764) Sonata was a delightful discovery for me here too.  Again there is grace and beauty in the opening Andante, contrasted with the joy of the final Giga.  Handel (1685-1759) is represented here in the Sonata in D major, and singers of Handel’s oratorios will recognise some of the music here from Solomon and Jeptha.  The recital ends with Sonata ‘La Follia’ – a set of variations on the popular theme, but not Corelli’s famous set.  This time, we have the lesser known Giovanni Albicastro’s (c.1660-c.1730) set, and this provides both players with a great way to shine and round off this excellent programme in style.  My only (very minor) quibble with this otherwise exemplary release is the lack of detail in the notes on the repertoire itself, as some of these works are less well-known – but there is a very interesting article on the tradition of the violin recital by Reinhard Goebel.  I await more recordings of this calibre from Pramsohler with anticipation.

Various. 2014. Corelli, Telemann, Leclair, Handel, Albicastro. Johannes Pramsohler, Philippe Grisvard. Compact Disc. Audax ADX13700.

The Tallis Scholars, directed by Peter Phillips, have reissued their landmark recording of Ikon of Light by Sir John Tavener (1944-2013) who died last year.  The recording is exactly 30 years old, and the work was commissioned by The Tallis Scholars, and premiered by them at the Cheltenham Festival that year.  Two other works on the disc were also premiered by The Tallis Scholars – Funeral Ikos, and the Great Canon of St Andrew of Crete.  The final piece here is one of Tavener’s most well-known short choral works, The Lamb, and it is conducted here by the composer himself.  In Ikon of Light, the singers are joined by members of the Chilingrian String Quartet (minus a violin) for a seven movement work of over forty minutes.  From the perspective of looking back over Tavener’s career, many of his trademarks are here – dramatic use of silence juxtaposed with loud, thick choral chords, his use of exact contrary motion and palindrome to create unusual dissonance, and his immersion in the Orthodox Church and its texts.  His use of the string trio is mostly to provide distant, rather ethereal textures, which the strident choral chords interrupt – although they do get an interlude by themselves in the long middle movement (which accounts for nearly half the piece).  Being used to hearing The Tallis Scholars in early repertoire on the whole, and in precise, polished recordings, it is actually refreshing to hear them with a slightly rougher, hard-edged sound, totally appropriate in this repertoire, and still with pinpoint tuning and accuracy throughout.  The other substantial work, the Great Canon, uses just twelve singers, with a bass cantor part sung very commandingly by Jeremy White.  Again, Tavener’s use of repetition to create a timeless, meditative atmosphere is in evidence, although I suspect this atmosphere would be better created by a live performance than on disc.  The performances of the two better known, shorter works here are strong, and the Alleluia setting that Tavener used frequently in his music is particularly effective here in Funeral Ikos.  The Lamb has been recorded so often and by so many now, but this historic performance with Tavener conducting is still a significant landmark.  The Tallis Scholars will be performing Ikon of Light, along with the première of Requiem Fragments, written just before the composer’s death, in the BBC Proms on Monday 4 August.

Tavener, J. 2014. Ikon of Light. The Tallis Scholars, Peter Phillips. (Release). Compact Disc. Gimell GIMSE 404.

(Edited versions of these reviews first appeared in GScene, June 2014)