Article reviewing the opera festivals Tête à Tête and Grimeborn for Classical Music Magazine, Oct 2011
900 words
What direction is contemporary opera moving in? According to 2011's new-opera festivals: every direction possible.
This summer, East and West London went head-to-head, fighting to bring opera into a new array of styles and subjects. Hammersmith's Tête à Tête festival earned it's boast as the ‘most imaginative laboratory for new opera’, presenting a diverse patchwork of finished productions alongside works in progress. Meanwhile, the 5th Grimeborn Festival ran in East London's gritty Dalston; a series of innovative operas and musical theatre pieces staged in the squat-chic Arcola Theatre.
Both festivals blurred the boundaries of traditional styles, forming operatic hybrids from movement-theatre, street entertainment, live electronics and performance-art. Themes ranged from traditional subjects (Greek mythology and Austen novels) to today's politics (ecological and middle-eastern issues) to the macabre and downright bizarre (drunk artists, sexualised nursery rhymes and the story of Ziggy, a cabaret-singing aborted foetus). Here is an overview of the works likely to remain with us for longer than one season:
Grimeborn launched with the London premiere of Jonathan Dove's new take on the Austen classic, Mansfield Park. 'When I first read Mansfield Park, over twenty years ago, I heard music' Dove claims; the appeal being to give expression to the quiet sufferings of the heroine, Fanny Price. The libretto, by Alasdair Middleton, distills Austen's story, making the Cinderella aspect its kernel. Herritage Opera commissioned the work, to add to their repertoire of chamber operas they perform at stately homes around England, using only a piano for accompaniment – an appropriate medium to set a 19th Century classic. Musically, Dove wanted to write something which was not bound by the stylistic procedures of the period, but would be recognisable and appropriate to the era. The result is an attractive and engaging work, which is reserved yet not lifeless; which manages to capture the charm of the period without becoming too chocolate-boxy. Dove's melodies for his characters are memorable, although at times the work could have benefited from more changes of key and harmony to move the action forward and prevent a feeling of stasis.
The 'traditional with a twist' idea was echoed elsewhere in the festival; Barefoot Opera reinvented Handel's Alcina for the Grimeborn, presenting it as a stripped-down version which kept the original melodies of the arias but accompanied them with just a clarinet and a harpsichord, adding an english narrator, folk interludes and pieces of movement theatre.
Other librettists, meanwhile, ventured into uncharted areas. With subject matter influenced by the recent successes of quirky opera-biogs, such as Anna Nicole, Steven Crowe's The Francis Bacon Opera, presents a humorous yet intelligent look at the life of the 20th Century's most revered painter. Staged inside a irregularly-shaped yellow scaffold – a motif featured in many of Bacon's paintings – the work uses an exact transcription from the 1985 Melvyn Bragg interview, which won awards for it's brutal honesty and controversial subject matter. Musically, we can see the attraction of Bacon and Bragg to the composer; Bacon's philosophical spiels about art and beauty were stretched into long luxurious melody lines, whilst the intonation of Bragg's questioning grew ever more ridiculous and high-pitched as he steadily grew more drunk.
The decadent and the absurd provided a recurrent theme, particularly for Tête à Tête, where the Jerwood Opera Writing Programme protégés Luke Styles and Peter Cant premiered the first scene of their unfinished work A Fetus in America, which breaks stylistic boundaries, bringing together drag, musical satire and cabaret to critique pro-life issues and American politics.
However, the most innovative material of the festivals – two Tête à Tête works that are clearly holding the torch for the future of new opera – were SizeZero Opera's The Boy Who Lived Down the Lane and Frances M Lynch's collaboration with Alejandro Viñao: Baghdad Monologue.
The Boy Who Lived Down the Lane was a short but truly outstanding work by Singaporean composer Diana Soh, which told a story of Jack and Jill in sexual pursuit of one another through a cut-and-paste libretto made entirely from snippets of nursery rhymes (James Currie). Dressed in a baby-doll dress the lead soprano and founder of the company, Laura Bowler, hurled herself through a series of schizophrenic ramblings, lending a sexual element to the originally innocent text. The score's rhythms were neat and articulate, its pace was fast and its material was fresh. However, its real innovation lay in the way that it combined different tonalities – simple, childlike, melodies in a major key against dissonant chords and obscure timbres – to achieve the effect of distorted innocence.
Baghdad Monologue was a work for a solo performer and live electronics which commented on the middle-eastern intervention, inspired by Eliot Weinberger's book What I Heard About Iraq. It was constructed from small soundbites, some abstract noise, others obvious references to everyday life: the call to prayer, George Bush's voice; the innocent sound of children playing. These were blended into Lynch's voice, used to punctuate it; they faded in, out, were sometimes distorted or bled into one another to create an exquisite patchwork of politically-charged aural meanings.
What united both works in their success was music's central and irreplaceable role. Whereas with Dove's Mansfield Park, or Crowe's Francis Bacon the music adds to the libretto, these works are entirely reliant on their medium in order to even make sense. The Boy Who Lived Down the Lane depends on it's music for its sense of befouled innocence; Baghdad Monologue depends music to refer to different cultures. If we want to see contemporary opera continue to flourish, then undoubtedly, this 'gestalt' approach is its foremost champion.
Tuesday, 13 September 2011
Thursday, 18 August 2011
Journal Entry: LBS Bach Club Publication, Bach Notes
Article for London Bach Society's BACH CLUB page, in their journal BACH NOTES. Sept 2011
500 words
How should we promote Bach to people ages 18-30? What should London Bach Society's BACH CLUB be, and do, to communicate Bach's music to this audience? How can we help those already persuaded by Bach's music to take their interest to new heights, whilst also providing an introduction to those unfamiliar with or undecided about his work?
Whilst electronic composition classical composers such as Glass, Reich, Eno, Xenakis and Feldman receive a natural social platform in current society, Bach is a figure more isolated to contemporary life. Many young people come to minimalism through an experience of film scores, which provide an emotionally evocative platform for music similar to what they are listening to already in its tonality, chord progressions and repeated idioms. Others turn to electronic composers and the neo-modernists in an extension of their interest in experimental popular forms and concept albums.
Bach possesses less of these observable 'lead-ins' to his music through contemporary culture. Often, he is spoken of as being a 'cerebral' composer. The intricate part writing in his fugues are said to play themselves out with almost mathematical precision, the passion of his cantatas is ignored, and instead they are praised for their architecture, structure and form.
Yet words such as form and structure are misleading, mathematical terms, they can give the impression that Bach is to be understood in the same manner you would understand the workings of an engine. They are, understandably, an unnattractive and pressurised way to promote music, whose allure lies in the emotional reaction to sound as much as the sound itself.
So, for newcomers to Bach, it is important to realise that, it is possible to appreciate him just by listening, not thinking: the same way you would appreciate any other music. By moving, mentally and emotionally with each arching melody, each expected and unexpected chord change, each vigorous upbeat and poignant cadence you can open yourself to, and experience Bach. You may find your emotions amplified at specific points in the composition or you may decide Bach has nothing for you BUT the only way for this realisation to occur, is through experiencing it directly.
Thus: in November 2009, London Bach Society launched BACH CLUB, for those aged 18-30. All BACH CLUB events are free for students and a modest cost for others. From November onwards BACH CLUB meetings will happen twice a year, but, as we see the BACH CLUB grow members and develop interest, we hope to increase this to more.
The meetings are modelled on the weekly events Bach himself headed, in the city of Leipzig. At the forefront of artistic life, Bach and his students would use the time to discuss and perform new music, new ideas and new meanings. Likewise, BACH CLUB wants to push music into new areas. The meetings will not just favour seasoned performers but will introduce new interpretations of Bach's work by new performers and première works by new composers influenced by Bach. Over drinks it will also give artists a chance to talk about their work, offer audience members opportunity to ask questions, share thoughts and make useful contacts for future performances, concerts and careers. Whilst this will provide a cultural 'lead-in' for those who have had little experience of Bach (and this is where YOU come in to invite as many curious friends as you have BACH CLUB events) the social space the meetings create will allow everyone to pursue Bach to their own level.
Please seek us out on Facebook, Twitter, and on the London Bach Society website, and we hope to see you in November
Monday, 1 August 2011
News Story: Boulez Festival, Women at the Vanguard - Classical Music Magazine
News Story - Boulez Festival, Women at the Vanguard - Classical Music Magazine - Second July Issue 2011
350 Words
SouthBank Centre Celebrates 'The Godfather' of new music with exquisite labyrinth: The music of Pierre Boulez culmonating in Boulez conducting his seminal modernist masterpiece.
Friday 30 September – Sunday 2 October 2011
Mr Boulez has been modern music's most active voice and participant over the last 60 years. His compositions utilize a range of compositional styles, from twelve-tone technique, controlled chance and aleatoric music, to the use of electronics.
The festival, running from 30th September - 2nd October, offers an opportunity to witness each of Boulez's experimental facets through exciting collaborations from the the leading figures of today's contemporary music scene, and will include performances of his major works. Experts are also to deliver their insights in an in an International Study Day, which will take place at the Royal Festival Hall on 1st October.
The programme also boasts a high level of female performers - who are becoming increasingly prominent in contemporary music - including finnish conductor Susanna Mälkki, pianist Tamara Stefanovich and Finnish soprano Barbara Hannigan, who will undertake a fiendishly difficult vocal role in the climax of the programme, the work Pli Selon Pli.
On Friday 20th September, the Royal Academy of Music's Manson Ensemble will kick off the celebration with a selection of Boulez's acoustic works. The concert will feature Rituel in memoriam Bruno Maderna, alongside two versions of his Domaines. The works explore the notion of musical space as a solo clarinetist transforms the work's soundscape by moving about the stage, interacting with different musical groups.
On Saturday 1st October, leading Hungarian composer Péter Eötvös will conduct London Sinfonietta,flautist Micheal Cox and violinist Clio Gould in a collaboration with a sound engineer and computer music designer from IRCAM to perform the electronic works Explosante-fixe and Anthèmes 2 for violin & live electronicsare.
The will weekend culminate on Sunday 2nd October, when all of Boulez's piano works are to be performed in three short recitals over one afternoon by his friends Piere-Laurent and Tamara Stefanovich. And, as a grand finale, Boulez himself will be conducting soprano Barbara Hannigan, Ensemble intercontemporain (which he founded in 1976) and the young musicians of the Lucerne Festival Academy Ensemble in his own seminal masterpiece, Pli selon pli (Fold by fold). The 70-minute work takes its inspiration and, more innovatively, its structure, from the poems of Stéphane Mallarmé.
Gillian Moore, Head of Contemporary Culture at Southbank Centre, describes the weekend as 'the perfect opportunity for curious audiences to discover and enjoy the vertiginous thrill of modernist music, brilliantly performed.’
Sunday, 27 March 2011
Preview: Laurent Korcia & HKPO
Laurent Korcia /HKPO/Yip Sing Wei on two dates for Le French May Arts Festival
15th April: Lam Lan Chee/Bernstein/Stravinsky
16th April: Items from Korcia's album Cinema
For TimeOut Magazine, Hong Kong
400 Words
Laurent Korcia has a split personality, or at the very least, is a man of many sides. The Frenchman, having graduated with the Premier Prix from the Paris Conservatoire and won an abundance of prestigious accolades, including the Paganini Jacques Long-Thibaud and Zino Francescatti International Competitions, is certainly an acclaimed performer of classical repertoire. But in recent years, he’s also indulged his more ‘pop’ side, finding widespread success with films, television commercials, and his 2009 release Cinema, a collection of movie score themes from Gershwin to Morricone. This fortnight, he shows off both of these sides to Hong Kong audiences.
Ruminations on love, virtue and mortality provide the theme for the Hong Kong Sinfonietta’s season-opening concert, with Korcia performing Bernstein's elegant Serenade after Plato's Symposium. Yet, in his second performance, he reveals a more playful side with a programme of party-pieces, filled with favourites from Cinema.
Rather refreshingly, Korcia sees little distinction between these musical genres. “I don't think of the [classical] repertoire as a special repertoire. To me, it is interesting that whatever I play I don't think of categories,” he says over the phone from Paris. “I think music is very universal and it talks about emotions that are very universal. I think that what people want in music is the integrity and intensity of playing and composing, and then this has little to do with what kind of repertoire they choose to perform.”
There has traditionally been a bit of snobbery over classical-mainstream crossovers, but this has started to change, thrust along by artists such as Korcia bringing the identity of the crossover artist to a new technical and conceptual realm. And for Korcia, this metamorphosis all starts with how you approach the music. “[Film music] is like any music. At the moment you play, you have to forget about your conceptions. As an interpreter, I always think it's good to be fresh in front of the piece of music.”
Indeed, cinematic scores seem to have a particular resonance with Korcia, especially in its ability to bring past experiences and images back to life. Korcia’s attitude is almost summed up in his in his own orchestration of Grappelli's Les Valseuses – a work that references films about youths living in the wilderness, wartime tragedy, and history, and that he will play in his second Hong Kong concert. Says Korcia: “I like the way that music brings you back to emotions or memories that you could have forgotten; with just a few notes it can bring back so much.”
Saturday, 8 January 2011
Concert Review: SOUNDFEST, Atherton & Atherton, HKPO, 07/01/11 (Stravinsky, Britten, Tchaikovsky)
SOUNDFEST, Hong Kong Cultural Centre, Friday 7th January 2011, David Atherton conducting Elizabeth Atherton (soprano) with the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra
300 Words
My initial desire as a concert-goer was for more sense of presence in the opening number of tonight's concert, Stravinksy's Symphonies of Wind Instruments. The hopping reed passages, recurrent in this initial number, could have defined the edges of the patchwork mood sequence through a sharper form of attack (required since, unfortunately, the HKPO was playing to a half-empty concert hall). Correspondingly, the finest sections were the slow chordal passages, which fanned out, beautifully, through stepwise lines with a solemn tone and sense of reservation. One could not help feeling that perhaps the performers were responding to this diminished sense of performance space.
Following on the heels of the Symphonies, however, Elizabeth Atherton sailed through a masterful rendition of Britten's Les Illuminations with a sense of confidence which placed her firmly at the helm of the programme's first half; each role she portrayed within the song cycle was entirely believable. Completely metamorphosing from animated narrator to serene bystander, she propelled and retracted the narrative seemingly at whim, catching the entire audience under the spell of her tongue and taking off with their emotions. Technically, each swoop and glide was faultlessly placed; each word perfectly matched by a subtle timbral facet.
The Nutcracker was the final item on the programme, and, as expected, David Atherton's show-stopper. From under the deft strokes of his baton, the HKPO unfurled each familiar melody with luscious romantic swells and securely tailored falls. Elements within Atherton's interpretation were both surprising and appealing: melodic lines were often portioned into shorter phrases, which kept the work light in relation to unusually heavy rhythmic drive he had given to the piece. With his shoulders slightly stiff, almost in the pose of a bear, Atherton even stepped into a waltz in more than one of the dance movements with surprising agility. Effectively, Atherton saved a fuller, weightier, sense of melodic line until the end to carry the glorious, sweeping final movement; a satisfying finale to a well-delivered programme.
300 Words
My initial desire as a concert-goer was for more sense of presence in the opening number of tonight's concert, Stravinksy's Symphonies of Wind Instruments. The hopping reed passages, recurrent in this initial number, could have defined the edges of the patchwork mood sequence through a sharper form of attack (required since, unfortunately, the HKPO was playing to a half-empty concert hall). Correspondingly, the finest sections were the slow chordal passages, which fanned out, beautifully, through stepwise lines with a solemn tone and sense of reservation. One could not help feeling that perhaps the performers were responding to this diminished sense of performance space.
Following on the heels of the Symphonies, however, Elizabeth Atherton sailed through a masterful rendition of Britten's Les Illuminations with a sense of confidence which placed her firmly at the helm of the programme's first half; each role she portrayed within the song cycle was entirely believable. Completely metamorphosing from animated narrator to serene bystander, she propelled and retracted the narrative seemingly at whim, catching the entire audience under the spell of her tongue and taking off with their emotions. Technically, each swoop and glide was faultlessly placed; each word perfectly matched by a subtle timbral facet.
The Nutcracker was the final item on the programme, and, as expected, David Atherton's show-stopper. From under the deft strokes of his baton, the HKPO unfurled each familiar melody with luscious romantic swells and securely tailored falls. Elements within Atherton's interpretation were both surprising and appealing: melodic lines were often portioned into shorter phrases, which kept the work light in relation to unusually heavy rhythmic drive he had given to the piece. With his shoulders slightly stiff, almost in the pose of a bear, Atherton even stepped into a waltz in more than one of the dance movements with surprising agility. Effectively, Atherton saved a fuller, weightier, sense of melodic line until the end to carry the glorious, sweeping final movement; a satisfying finale to a well-delivered programme.
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