In concert – Carolin Widmann, CBSO / Nicholas Carter: Haydn, Ligeti & Brahms

Carolin Widmann (violin, below), City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra / Nicholas Carter

Haydn Symphony no.96 in D major Hob.1/96 ‘Miracle’ (1791)
Ligeti Violin Concerto (1989-93)
Brahms Symphony no.3 in F major Op.90 (1883)

Symphony Hall, Birmingham
Wednesday 1 November 2023

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

Tonight’s concert by the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra saw a collaboration with the well-regarded Nicholas Carter – former chief conductor of the Adelaide Symphony, now holding that position with Bühnen Bern alongside guest appearances in Europe and the US.

Few conductors would nowadays begin a programme with a Haydn symphony, and Carter’s take on no.96 did not lack for conviction. The Miracle of a falling if harmless chandelier may have taken place at the premiere of no.102 but does not lessen the quality of this work, its slyly portentous Adagio introducing an Allegro whose motivic unity is most evident in a tensile development and agile coda. With felicitous writing for oboe (rendered so by Helena Mackie) and violin (a welcome ‘guest lead’ from Zoë Beyers), the Andante is the highlight – Carter making the most of antiphonal violins where the gains in clarity or incisiveness were never in doubt. Steady but with a lilting grace then a piquant trio, the Minuetto was a perfect foil to the final Vivace – its energetic interplay duly capped by a coda of uninhibited verve.

Good that the CBSO marked György Ligeti’s centenary with his Violin Concerto, combining the composer’s love of polyrhythms and varied tunings with a heady recall of his Hungarian heritage. No stranger to this piece, Carolin Widmann emphasized the teasing reticence of its Praeludium and found aching nostalgia in the folk inflections of its Aria-Hoquetus-Choral. The coruscating build-up of its Intermezzo and finely wrought intensity of its Passacaglia were well judged, Carter bringing out the strangeness of orchestral writing with its extremes of register and an array of unorthodox instruments. The final Appassionato was trenchantly done, and while Widmann’s overly matter-of-fact cadenza robbed the closing ensemble bars of their barbed humour, it proved a small blemish on this otherwise captivating performance.

BrahmsThird Symphony has done well by the CBSO in recent seasons, and Carter’s reading was no exception. Any hint of stolidity at the outset of the initial Allegro had gone during the exposition’s repeat, then the development accrued a momentum such as carried through to the end of this movement. The coda’s transfigured poise (Brahms’ riposte to Tristan?) was no less evident in the Andante, its melodic simplicity belying an emotional ambiguity as was implied by its ruminative asides before suddenly being made explicit during the confiding final pages.

The Poco allegretto was (rightly) taken not as an extra slow movement, rather an intermezzo of a pathos which was accentuated by its deft forward motion. The final Allegro then brought a culmination in all respects – Carter alive to its stark contrasts between the speculative and the combative, with a thrilling transition into the reprise then a coda that recalled the work’s defining motto with mingled aspiration and benediction on its way to an ending of perfectly judged repose. Never the easiest symphony to bring off, this was a Brahms Three to savour.

Carter will hopefully be working with this orchestra again soon. Next Wednesday’s concert brings Cristian Macelaru in a programme with Sibelius and Mendelssohn, while Thursday’s Centre Stage recital has a welcome revival of the Clarinet Quintet by Elizabeth Maconchy.

You can read all about the 2023/24 season and book tickets at the CBSO website. Click on the artist names for more information on violinist Carolin Widmann and conductor Nicholas Carter, and for more about composer György Ligeti

Published post no.1,998 – Friday 3 November 2023

News – Norfolk & Norwich Festival 2024

Arcana does not often publish news about live events, but is very happy to make a biased exception in this case, since our editor is Norwich-born and bred!

The Norfolk & Norwich Festival is one of the jewels in the crown of East Anglia’s cultural year, and next year’s model looks like being no exception, with an imaginative pairing of artists and venues. Here is more detail from the press release:

NORFOLK & NORWICH FESTIVAL 2024
FRIDAY 10 – SUNDAY 26 MAY 2024

  • NORFOLK & NORWICH FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES FIRST SEVEN SHOWS FOR 2024 AHEAD OF THE FULL PROGRAMME ANNOUNCEMENT NEXT YEAR
     
  • CORAZÓN – A WORLD PREMIERE FROM CIRCUS GROUP CIRCOLOMBIA CREATED ESPECIALLY FOR THE ADNAMS SPIEGELTENT
     
  • INITIAL ARTISTS INCLUDE KENNY ANDERSON (AKA KING CREOSOTE) AND NORFOLK BORN MUSICIAN LAURA CANNELL WITH THE LIVE VERSION OF HER ALBUM ANTIPHONY OF THE TREES
     
  • CLASSICAL CONCERTS FROM MAHAN ESFAHANI WITH BRITTEN SINFONIA, AND AURORA ORCHESTRA 
     
  • NIGHT PIPES – AN UNIQUE NIGHT-TIME MEDITATION FEATURING THE MUSIC OF MESSIAEN AT NORWICH CATHEDRAL ON THE NEWLY REBUILT ORGAN
     
  • EAST ANGLIA’S ACCLAIMED POET AND PERFORMER LUKE WRIGHT BRINGS HIS LATEST SHOW SILVER JUBILEE
     
  • 2024 FESTIVAL RUNS 10 MAY – 26 MAY 2024, PUBLIC BOOKING FOR FIRST SHOWS OPENS ON WEDNESDAY 8 NOVEMBER 2023

With a full programme for 2024 set to be announced in the New Year, Norfolk & Norwich Festival have today announced the first shows to go on sale for next year’s programme. The Festival will run for 17 days from 10 May – 26 May 2024 with artists from around the world and across the region presenting a huge variety of work and events in Norwich and across the county.

All the way from South America and created especially for the Festival’s Adnams Spiegeltent, Circolombia will present the World Premiere of Corazón (‘heart’ in Spanish).  Founded in 2006, Circolombia showcase the talents of young Columbians, and is known for producing high-energy modern circus shows with a distinctive Latin feel. Having toured across the world, performing at festivals from Adelaide to Edinburgh, they arrive to headline the Spiegeltent in Festival Gardens between 15 – 26 May. Corazón will be in keeping with their acclaimed style – a circus concert full of breathless acrobatic feats and infectious music.

On the opening weekend Aurora Orchestra will return to the Festival for the first time in seven years with Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3. Performed entirely from memory, audiences will be treated to a delightfully intimate concert on 11 May at Norwich Cathedral.

The Festival welcomes back leading champion of the harpsichord Mahan Esfahani. Performing with Britten Sinfonia on 25 May, they’ll complete their season-long Bach collaboration at St Peter Mancroft in Norwich. Alongside the complete cycle of Bach’s uplifting and era-defining keyboard concertos, they will perform a programme of Bach’s second orchestral suite, which doubles as a flute concerto, and the baroque concerto the fifth Brandenburg. They are joined by violinist Jacqueline Shave. 

Also on the opening weekend, Ashley Grote will present a unique, meditative performance on the newly rebuilt Norwich Cathedral organ, on 12 May. Norwich Cathedral has one of the largest pipe organs in the country, featuring an incredible 5,767 pipes that range from ten metres to just an inch long. In a programme of Olivier Messiaen, the Cathedral Master of Music will play three towering works of the organ repertoire, displaying the full range of the instrument.

Kenny Anderson (aka King Creosote) will bring his emotive brand of folk-pop to the Festival for one night on 18 May at Norwich Cathedral. King Creosote has released over 100 records since his debut in the 1990s, and his songs have been covered and performed by artists including Simple Minds and Patti Smith. His latest album, I DES explores a kaleidoscopic musical terrain with vibraphones, accordions, e-bows and samplers. 

Norwich born, international musician Laura Cannell will present the live version of her seventh solo album Antiphony of the Trees – a concert focused solely on the recorder and taking inspiration from the sound of the birdsong which cuts through the crisp air of the fen valley where she lives. Armed with bass, tenor, alto and double recorders, she will transcribe birdsong into a minimalist solo chamber music.

Fellow East Anglian and Festival favourite Luke Wright returns with his latest critically acclaimed show Silver Jubilee. For twenty-five years, Luke has built a reputation for being one of Britain’s most popular live poets. With sold out shows across the world, he regularly tours with John Cooper Clarke and The Libertines. Silver Jubilee provides a warm, funny and honest hour of poems and stand-up with the directness and pathos for which he has come to be known. The show includes some wild experiments in the form of a nervous kitten called Sir John Betjeman and a healthy smattering of drum ‘n’ bass.

Daniel BrineFestival Director said: “It always feels like we’re up and running each year with the announcement of the first shows. While it’s only a tiny taste of what’s to come, there’s a nice representative blend of the local and the international – something that’s particularly important to our Festival. We’re also really excited to present a brand new show from the fantastic Circolombia – a show packed full of their trademark music and energetic circus skills, but one unusually created specifically for a Spiegeltent.” 

You can find out more at the festival website

LISTINGS

Aurora Orchestra
Eroica By Heart
Saturday 11 May, 6pm & 8pm
Norwich Cathedral

Ashley Grote
Night Pipes: Olivier Messiaen Organ Works
Sunday 12 May, 9pm
Norwich Cathedral

Circolombia
Corazón
Wednesday 15 – Sunday 26 May
7.30pm (Sun 5.30pm)
Adnams Spiegeltent

King Creosote
Saturday 18 May, 8pm
Norwich Cathedral

Luke Wright’s
Silver Jubilee
Fri 24 May, 5pm
Adnams Spiegeltent

Bach: Mahan Esfahani & Britten Sinfonia
Saturday 25 May, 7.30pm
St Peter Mancroft

Laura Cannell
Antiphony of the Trees
Sun 12 May, 7.45pm
Norwich Cathedral

In concert – Brian Eno & Baltic Sea Philharmonic @ Royal Festival Hall

Brian Eno (vocals, instruments), Melanie Pappenheim (vocals), Leo Abrahams (guitar), Peter Chilvers (instruments, software), Peter Serafinowicz (vocals), Baltic Sea Philharmonic Orchestra / Kristjan Järvi

Brian Eno
The Ship [The Ship, Fickle Sun (I), Fickle Sun (II) The Hour Is Thin, Fickle Sun (III) I’m Set Free]
By This River, Who Gives A Thought, And Then So Clear, Bone Bomb, Making Gardens Out Of Silence, There Were Bells

Royal Festival Hall
Monday 30 October (9 pm concert)

by Ben Hogwood photos (c) Ben Hogwood, not to be reproduced without permission

The estimable Setlist website, documenting the concert history of artists and bands, has a notable seven-year gap between Brian Eno’s last live appearances and this new tour, in which he has been bringing an orchestral perspective to his 2016 album The Ship.

Many artists in Eno’s ambient sphere have looked at the orchestra as a vehicle for original composition, but more recently the tendency has been for artists to use it to regenerate past material, and – perish the thought – boost awareness and bank balance by association through touring. This tactic is clearly not for Eno, who invested a great deal of time in finding the right ensemble before even looking at the layout of this tour. Seeking fresh talent and players with flexibility, he alighted on the Baltic Sea Philharmonic Orchestra, a ten-year-old ensemble conducted by the dynamic Kristjan Järvi. It is fascinating to think that Kristjan, part of a remarkable Estonian conducting trio after father Neeme and elder brother Paavo, is creating new directions for his family, stepping out on ever more adventurous voyages into contemporary music.

This one – on the banks of the Thames – takes its lead from the most famous voyage of the 20th century, the Titanic. Yet Eno chooses not to tell the story in graphic detail, portraying the ship instead through shades of orchestration, atmospheric noise and folk-like utterances. These are made through his own sonorous tones, which worked in this concert to vivid effect. The sonic picture was surely aided by the inclement weather in the UK, the audience becoming part of the vessel as the sea spray splashed against the side. Meanwhile the creaks of the orchestra’s wooden instruments portrayed the boat’s natural bowing and bending.

Eno’s music for The Ship reflects his ambient work, in which the music makes incremental changes in its own sweet time, but it shows how ambient music can also be loud. As time progressed this performance assumed a dramatic intensity way above that of the home listening experience. The orchestra’s control was a key aspect, with Järvi ensuring the musicians had as much freedom as they wanted. He walked around the stage to cajole individual players or sections, then faced the audience as though looking out to sea himself. Dressed in colour-co-ordinated t-shirts, the players could see each other and their conductor in the dark – not to mention the cerise shirt of Eno, a point of vivid colour in the middle.

Eno’s vocal was complemented by the understated yet versatile voice of Melanie Pappenheim, and the thoughtful input of guitarist Leo Abrahams and keyboard player / software designer Peter Chilvers. Also present was the actor and comedian Peter Serafinowicz, reading a monologue on war through rich bass tones.

The Ship, a three-movement suite, had at its heart Fickle Sun, itself in three parts. Here the onward motion of the orchestra was irresistible, still moving slowly like the Titanic but flattening everything in its path. Then, the struggle over, Eno reached for the Velvet Underground cover I’m Set Free, its heart-shifting chord progression nudging at the emotions with every repetition, providing an tidal swell for the audience.

This performance was a triumph of spirit and resolve, a warming combination in these troubled times. The encores continued in the same vein, though the deeply uncomfortable Bone Bomb, from 2005 album Another Day On Earth, provided painful relevance with its response to an article on a suicide bomber in Palestine. Eno paused the music after this to give his own unstinting views on the conflict with Israel, declaring proceeds from the Ships gigs would go to help those suffering from the war in Gaza.

Of the other encore items Making Gardens Out Of Silence, from last year’s ForeverAndEverNoMore, reached a more obvious inner peace, before There Were Bells, found Eno’s music once again reaching beyond the ambient to find notes of sustainable emotional power. Equal strength was found in By This River, the earliest music of the night (from 1977), and the track that stayed with the audience long after the concert had finished.

At the end Eno and Järvi generously credited the band and orchestral musicians, looking beyond to single out those responsible for monitoring and lighting, two crucial overlooked b but crucial elements of any performance. The lighting was wholly suitable, the relative darkness allowing the audience to use their mind’s eye in response to Eno’s resolute constructions. Thus was a memorable evening, and one in which the main man himself was also deeply moved.

Online Concert recommendation: Nicholas Daniel & Huw Watkins @ Wigmore Hall

Nicholas Daniel (oboe, picture (c) Eric Richmond), Huw Watkins (piano, picture (c) Benjamin Ealovega

by Ben Hogwood

Here is a nudge in the direction of a very fine concert given at the Wigmore Hall yesterday by oboist Nicholas Daniel and pianist Huw Watkins.

They were in the company of three fine living composers – Althea Talbot-Howard, Michael Berkeley and David Matthews – whose music features in the concert, alongside works by Clara and Robert Schumann, and an arrangement for oboe and piano of a Mozart violin sonata.

Talbot-Howard’s contribution is to rework an attractive sonata for flute and harp by Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, for oboe and piano, another stage in the concert rehabilitation of this remarkable 18th century composer.

You can watch a lovely, affirmative hour of music on YouTube below:

For more livestreamed concerts from the Wigmore Hall, click here

Published post no.1,995 – Tuesday 31 October 2023

Switched On: Boozoo Bajou – Finistère (Pilotton)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

This is the first long playing release from Boozoo Bajou for nearly ten years. The Nürnberg duo of Florian Seyberth and Peter Heider are up to their fifth album, and in that time they have seen little reason to change a musical philosophy that has seen them produce some high quality down tempo music over the last 20 years.

Finistère sees them migrate to a new label, their own Pilotton imprint, presumably giving them more autonomy over musical decisions. These include vocalists JULES and Steve Spacek, who contribute guest slots along with co-producers Fürsattl and MODALiST.

The vinyl edition contains exclusive album versions.

What’s the music like?

Boozoo Bajou have the knack of making their music sound completely effortless from the first note., and so it is with this album. “You don’t have to say anything, you don’t have to do anything”, says the voice on Pen Ar Bed – and so it proves. This is music borne of the outdoors, with slow, dusty beats that creep across the sonic perspective, with easy guitar-based material close up and various atmospherics far off.

The beats are typically slow and dub-infused, with heat-soaked panoramas opening up on tracks like Tough Times. This is one of two excellent vocals from JULES, who adds more of a vocalise to Tiefer, later on in the album. She is complemented by Steve Spacek, whose contribution to Sparks features a beautifully measured vocal that takes the groove unexpectedly near to Sade territory.

Of the instrumental tracks, the tick-tock of Orfeu marks the easy passing of time, Calcutta Glow ambles easily down the street and Viajantes, an exotic-sounding number, comes to the listener through a thick heat haze of atmospherics. All these and No Catch, a sultry number, could easily last for twice as long and not outstay their welcome.

Höhensonne is rather lovely in its extended mix, the glare of the sun beating down on the listener, the musical equivalent of the middle of a hot day.

Does it all work?

It does. Boozoo Bajou play to their strengths throughout, the collaborators are very well chosen and the music finds just the right balance between laziness and emotional involvement.

Is it recommended?

It is, without reservation – an album that proves every bit as good as the last four Boozoo Bajou albums. These guys know the meaning of the word ‘consistency’!

Listen

This album is due for release on Friday 3 November, when a Spotify link will appear here.

Buy

You can explore purchase options for Finistère from the Boozoo Bajou website

Published post no.1,994 – Monday 30 October 2023