Showing posts with label Edinburgh Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edinburgh Festival. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 February 2015

Strange rumblings from the Edinburgh International Festival

What's happening at the Edinburgh International Festival 2015? An announcement has been doing the rounds but it isn't a season announcement.  M\aybe any publicity is better than no publicity but what does that tell us about the new management under Fergus Linehan. Maybe they're aiming at the tourist market who book for the experienece, rather than for the music. EIF is very much a feature of the tourist circuit. Australians, for example, don't come of age unless they go there. Americans tend to do Stratford-on-Avon

So the EIF is getting Lang Lang, Vassily Petrenko, Anne-Sofie Mutter, and a mix of largely un-named "Scottish" and "young" performers. That's all very nice, but for a festival that purports to be "International" shouldn't it be offering a bit more? Luckily for the rest of us, the BBC has been broadcasting about a dozen concerts a year, a very important extension of the festival's reach.

The really exciting news is that the EIF is doing Sibelius Kullervo to mark the 50th anniversary of the Edinburgh Festival Chorus, and also Berlioz Grand messes des morts.  The former is quite a coup since the piece was only put back into circulation some 20 years after Sibelius's death, for many reasons.  It's a remarkable piece with all the pros and cons of being a very early work - raw, passionate and in many ways so wild that one might imagine some of the reasons for its suppression.  Again, a great thing for the EIF Chorus, but who are the soloists  ? If the EIF had musical nous, they'd market this more.

*Musical firsts* are the world premiere of André Previn’s Nonet   and the Scottish premiere of Festival co-commission James MacMillan’s Second Percussion Concerto., the latter being significant given MacMillan's role as the best-known Scottish composer. No Judith Weir, whose explorations of Scottish stories would be fascinating for locals and visitors alike.  Only a vague hint as to what else is on offer :  "Stories of love, money, magic and ghosts come alive in major narrative musical works including The Rake’s Progress, Kullervo and Petrushka.  Since Kullervo features rape, incest and suicide, those who come for love might be shocked.  So we'll have to wait til March 18th to find out more.

Tuesday, 12 March 2013

Edinburgh International Festival 2013

Edinburgh International Festival 2013 details are out now. The season starts on 9th August with Prokofiev's Alexander Nevsky, with mezzo Yulia Matochkina and the Edinburgh Festival Chorius.  Royal Scottish National Orchestra are wonderful in Russian repertoire, so this will be worth hearing. Valery Gergiev conducts and  Daniil Trifonov plays Prokofiev Piano Concerto No 3. 

The next night will be just as dramatic, though very different. Edgard Varèse Intégrales and Amériques, with Berio Sinfonia.  Ilan Volkov conducts the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra with Synergy Vocals. Highly recommended. More Varèse later in an eclectic event by Ensemble MusicFabrik mixing Varèse with Frank Zappa with John Cage.

Then, Opéra Lyons brings a semi-staged Beethoven Fidelio to Edinburgh, conducted by Kazushi Ono, with a good cast including Erika Sunnegårdh and Nikolai Schukoff.  Fidelio will be the highlight but consider a very different new Lulu, based on Berg but reinterpreted by Olga Neuwirth. It's directed by John Fulljames, and is a joint venture between The Opera Group and Scottish Opera, Bregenzer Festspiele and Young– Vic in association with the London Sinfonietta. Automatically this lifts it out of the ordinary. It's significant enough that there is no way it's not going to be heard later in London. Frankfurt Opera is presenting a double bill of Bluebeard's Castle and Dido and Aeneas. Bartók and Purcell together? Frankfurt could pull this off, especially as it's directed by Barrie Kosky.


From Munich, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra with Mariss Jansons do two concerts, Beethoven Piano Concerto no 4 with Mitsuko Uchida, and Mahler's Symphony no 2. Daniele Gatti conducts Mahler's Eighth Symphony on 30/8 with the Royal Concertgebouw Amsterdam.

Definitely a must: René Jacobs conducting the superb Scottish Chamber Orchestra  in Haydn Symphony no 104 "London" and Beethoven The Creatures of Prometheus on 25/8. Yannick Nézet-Séguin conducts the Chamber Orchestra of Europe in Strauss, Haydn and Beethoven (Eroica).
 
Mitsuko Uchida is also doing a solo programme of Bach, Schoenberg and Schumann on 13/9.  Nicolai Lugansky, Andreas Haeflinger, Olga Jegunova and Pierre-Laurent Aimard to come as well.  Christophe Rousset is giving two harpsichord recitals, and also leading Les Talens Lyriques in a very interesting Couperin programme. Lugansky returns to play Rachmaninoff 3 with Mikhail Pletnev and the Russian National Orchestra.

Lots more, including Robin Ticciati, The Arditti Quartet, Gerhaher, Werner Güra, Dorothea Röschmann, Ian Bostridge, Véronique Gens and Bernarda Fink, Philip Glass, the Jacquin Trio, The Hebrides Ensemble, The Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir and more. Visit the Edinburgh International Festival site HERE.


photo: Thanks to Stuart Craie from Edinburgh

Tuesday, 4 September 2012

Morton Feldman meets William Walton - Edinburgh Festival


Morton Feldman and William Walton on the same programme! The Edinburgh International Festival closed on an eclectic note. Juliet Willliams reports :

After the visits of several distinguished guest orchestras, as the Festival drew to a close, Edinburgh's Usher Hall returned its platform to a native group, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. The festival spirit though continued with the appearance of American guest conductor David Robertson. Mr Robertson, who studied at the Royal Academy of Music in London and is known for his interpretations of English music, brought us one piece of this genre, one from his native California and one from New England, in a varied  programme which ably demonstrated the width of his range. He showed a charming and gracious demeanour to performers, soloist and audience alike throughout this demanding concert, indicating finally after taking several curtain calls that he wished to retire to slake his thirst!

Under his baton emerged a shimmery, silken and characteristically West-coast sound, as the RSNO opened the programme with Charles Ives's Unanswered Question. As with Simon Rattle on Thursday with the Berliner Philharmoniker, the two opening works were segued into each other, here the Unanswered Question with Morton Feldman's Coptic Light, which had the effect of illuminating both and bringing a pleasing lightness of touch. The entire first half  was very slow; gentle, graceful, serene with a diffuse sound world. Morton Feldman was a leading musical and cultural figure of the American West Coast in the 1950s and 60s, being closely associated with John Cage (whose music has been performed recently at the BBC Proms this year) but also with practitioners of other art forms such as the painter Mark Rothko: one of Feldman's seminal works is Rothko Chapel, and there is a similarity of mood in their output. Coptic Light  is a shorter piece and – at about thirty minutes - more practical for concert performance, but from the same compositional period. It's quiet, subtle and expansive, but with a slightly melancholy undertow pervading it. 

After the interval, the Edinburgh International festival's music programme closed as it had opened: with  a  big choral work. This was a more straightforward performance than the opening with Delius' Mass of Life: an exciting and dynamic account of the well-known 'Belshazzar's Feast'.

This picked up a  recent Festival theme in that it echoed the theme of vengeance in James McMillan's short opera, Clemency,  which I recently reviewed. Walton's Israelites however celebrate  with shouts of joyous triumph rather than MacMillan's Abraham having an ambiguous struggle with the avenging angels. This thematic connection was highlighted by the use in the programme of Rembrandt’s painting, Belshazzar's Feast, showing the disembodied hand descending to write in Hebrew on the wall of the King's palace.

The brass playing was especially good; where a  'God of Brass' is referred to, there was brass in the gods, a musical pun which worked well in the large space of the Usher Hall. This enjoyable performance with the popular local Festival Chorus received a rousing reception from a generous audience which mixed locals and festival-goers.

Edinburgh International Festival, Usher Hall, Sat 1st September
Neal Davies - baritone, Edinburgh Festival Chorus, David Robertson, RNSO
The Unanswered Question – Charles Ives
Coptic Light – Morton Feldman
Belshazzar's Feast  - William Walton

Sunday, 2 September 2012

Huw Watkins In the Locked Room Edinburgh Festival

Huw Watkins's opera In the Locked Room is coming to the Linbury at the Royal Opera House soon. It's just premiered at the Edinburgh Festival. Juliet Williams reports

'In the Locked Room' sets an eternal story of a love triangle on the Sussex coast. It's based partly on a short story by Thomas Hardy and infused with the poetry of David Harsent, who writes the libretto. But the sum here is far, far greater than the total of the parts. This relatively predictable-seeming situation is wound into a gripping psychological drama, further enhanced by its music and staging. The psychological claustrophobia is mimicked by the use of a doll's house to represent the Sussex house where they all live.

Huw Watkins's music subtly enhances the story to further intensify its already powerful narrative. Scottish Opera's mini-series of mini-operas are all well worth seeing, but this is the jewel in the crown. Overstretched City financier Stephen negotiates the use of a seaside home with his wife Ella, who stays at home tending the garden and reading. Stephen becomes more and more wrapped up in his work, and his neglected wife turns for solace to poetry she has found, whch turns out to be written by a mysterious occupant of a room, which is always locked, in the buidling where they live. Ella withdraws further and further into her fantasies about the absent poet, eventually meeting him with predictably tragic consequences for all of them. There's a Shakespearian-style sub-plot where the greater similarity Stephen has with their business-like landlady than with the dreamy Ella is subtly pointed up from time to time.

Paul Curievici (raved in Chelsea Opera Group's La forza del destino here)  as Stephen has the least sympathetic character but a very enjoyable voice. In a generous double bill, this delightful and intense vignette is followed by a slower-moving enactment of the horrors of war. It's an updating of some of the messages of the War Poets of a century ago, and the use of Plato's words, “Only the dead have seen the end of war,” reminds us that this theme too is a perennial one for humanity.

Stuart McRae – a pupil of James MacMillan (whose opera Clemency was reviewed here) - is known for his writing for the cinema, and the music and staging here have strong cinematic elements. 'Ghost Patrol', like 'In the Locked Room' is also in many ways a love triangle situation, but not so much one between a woman and two men (although this is one plot element, it is overall a relatively minor one) but a man torn between his love for a woman on the one hand and the camaraderie and structure of military life on the other. Both Alasdair and Sam are former soldiers having difficulty adjusting to civilian life. Alasdair is apparently more successful than Sam, running a bar, where the action is set, in an unspecified garrison town. The more unfortunate soldier breaks in by night, and the opera opens on a very exciting scene where a man clad only in underpants wrestles with a masked intruder. After a brief struggle, they soon recognise each other though as comrades from army days.

The arrival of the bartender's girlfriend, Vicki, onto the scene quickly reveals though that he too is frequently awakened by nightmares, he too is affected by what might now be termed 'combat stress' or 'post traumatic stress disorder'. Both are torn between missing army life and being haunted by the horrors of war. Vicki, the girlfriend, is a strong and bitter woman, militantly (pun intended) opposed to war. Yet it is never explained why then she makes her life with an ex-soldier. She urges the men to embrace peace and make a new life, but she has only a rather limited life as a pub entertainer, which with further irony involves an act where she dresses up in military uniform as a forces sweetheart of the 1940s (again this device emphasises the timelessness of the opera's message). These unresolved issues, combined with her repetitive and at times unsubtle polemic, make this character less than entirely satisfactory. Jane Harrington, who has trained both as an actress and at the Royal College of Music, is very good in this role, notwithstanding its intrinsic limitation. As before, there is a generally high standard of performances from all the singers and musicians. There's another Edinburgh performance tomorrow (2nd September) on the final day of the Festival, but it's sold out and has been for some time. There's another chance to see this programme in Glasgow, and both operas will be in London later in the year.


Edinburgh International Festival, Traverse Theatre
'In the Locked Room'
Huw Watkins – music, David Harsent – libretto
Ruby Hughes – Ella, Hakan Vramsmo – Pascoe, Paul Curievici – Stephen,  Louise Winter – Susan
The Orchestra of Scottish Opera, Michael Rafferty - Conductor, Michael McCarthy - Director

'Ghost Patrol'
Stuart McRae - music, Louise Welsh – libretto
James McOran-Campbell – Alasdair, Nicholas Sharratt – Sam, Jane Harrington - Vicki, The Orchestra of Scottish Opera, Michael Rafferty - Conductor, Matthew Richardson - Director

Saturday, 1 September 2012

James MacMillan Clemency Edinburgh Festival


From Juliet Williams : Following last week's premiere of his new concert piece Since it was the Day of Preparation (review HERE) the Edinburgh Festival continues its tribute to national composer James MacMillan with the Scottish premiere  (as mentioned in Robert Hugill's review) of his short opera Clemency, which opened at the Royal Opera House last May. Like last week's performance, this work takes a religious theme, but here from the Old Testament rather than the New – the story of Abraham and Sarah being told that despite their advanced years, Sarah – previously childless – would bear a son.

Set in the present day, staged in a humble dwelling which could be in any Mediterranean or near eastern country, Abraham is initially seen as a humble figure; a regular guy. Mysterious visitors, looking like intinerant building workers, arrive and are made welcome according to the Jewish custom; they go on to announce that, 'One year from now we will return and Sarah will have borne a son'. A parallel with Since it was the day of preparation is the encounter with the divine, initially unrecognised, in a guise of the most ordinary folk, followed by a realisation which transforms.

The title, seemingly unrelated to this better-known scene, refers to the visitors' mission, which turns out to be one of vengeance. In a scene which may be more familiar to Jewish than to Christian listeners, Abraham pleads for mercy asking if, 'For fifty good deeds, the inhabitants of two towns would be spared?' In a scene which is the dramatic climax of the work, he then goes on to try to drive a better bargain on behalf of apparently unknown citizens, driving down the terms for the number of selfless acts or good deeds from fifty to 'five good men and true'. 

Christian listeners may see a foreshadowing of Christ as advocate in the forefather Abraham taking that role. Just as Sarah's persona is transformed by the at first improbable news of her approaching pregnancy, Abraham undergoes a personal transformation from the everyday figure of the opening scene to  take the courageous and surprising step of challenging the divine messengers; not once but repeatedly. Just as Abraham demonstrates the virtuous quality of hospitality, in arguing for that of mercy, the mantle of divine attributes seems to shift to him.

The final scene contrasts the spontaneous 'mercy' shown to Sarah and her husband contrasting with the seemingly harsh lack of the same meted out despite Abraham's intercessions on behalf of those living nearby. She sings:

“Months from now, with a babe in my arms,
Under these terebinths, on the cool grass,
I will sing, among the leaves, new songs
Of gratitude and terror, rescue and loss.
Will my newborn son see, as he blinks at the sky,
The thumbprints of smoke from a valley on fire?”

This is a short but intense and powerful work, and is well worth seeing. Its religious context contains emotions of universal human relevance. A further performance in Edinburgh is tomorrow (Sat 1st  September) but it is repeated next weekend in Glasgow – details and booking on Scottish Opera's own website. American readers may be interested to know that there are plans for a future tour  of this work to Boston.

Cast : Janis Kelly (Sarah) Grant Doyle (Abraham) Christopher Diffey Adam Green, Eamonn Mulhall, The Orchestra of Scottish Opera Derek Clark (conductor)

Saturday, 25 August 2012

Simon Smith at the Edinburgh Festival


One of the delights of the Edinburgh Festival is its ability to throw up unexpected gems. One of these was yesterday's recital given by pianist Simon Smith, to commemorate Stockhausen's would-have-been-birthday.

Whereas larger scale events were taking place today and yesterday – here in Edinburgh a ballet set to the Helicopter Quartet (a piece also streamed live from Birmingham Opera); the first ever staging of the opera, 'Mittwoch' in Birmingham …. - this was a tribute on a smaller scale. Nevertheless it was a serious and important tribute to this challenging composer by a musician who knows and appreciates his works really well. It was an honour and a privilege to be able to watch this dedicated and inspiring performance – perhaps the highlight of this  year's festival so far for me  -  and to boot, it was free (retiring collection for church funds/concert expenses) !

Watching this performance was exciting, and the repertoire chosen gave a good insight into Stockahusen's work and the evolution of his style, ranging from 1955 to 1984. The opening piece, Klavierstuck XIV, subtitled 'Birthday Formula' – with its chanted German numbers and hissing and clacking sounds - showed the debt to this composer which is owed by George Crumb's 'Black Angels'. A range of earlier pieces wer then offered; one dedicated to Pierre Boulez on the occasion of his 60th birthday; one exploring the resonances the piano could give to the single note of middle C sharp and one where the durations of notes , bars and gestures is determined by the Fibonacci mathematical series. A longer final work, 'Lucifer's Dream' then concluded the recital, based on the opening scene of the opera 'Samstag' from the sequence 'Licht', originally for bass voice and piano. It is the most dramatic of the pieces and includes extended techniques and two bundles sof Indian bells suspended at the ends of the piano.

Simon Smith studied with Giles Swayne and has performed and recorded the complete piano music of James MacMillan, whose music was also performed at a later event in Edinburgh on the same day, as well as piano work by Stuart McRae, whose new chamber opera I will be reporting on next week.

 By Juliet Willaims