Lots of carol-singing: outside church

A few days before Christmas I did something I haven’t done before: joined the Chandos Singers for carol-singing at Bath’s Green Park Station (for non-Bathonians, this is a former railway terminus which now houses shops and a brasserie). One of the rules about open-air singing (which this sort of was) is that anything very noisy which could happen nearby chooses that moment to do so. In this case it was the brasserie behind us choosing to dismantle a marquee. We ran through our seasonal sequence from the most recent concert and a fair chunk of the anniversary volume, Carols for Choirs 1, then after refreshing ourselves with mince pies and mulled wine, we repeated our set. We collected money for a local charity, with older people and young women being most likely to contribute, though all sorts of people did so.

On Christmas Eve it was the usual village carol singing round the houses. We had a large group this year, probably because of the mild weather. And something which has never happened before: a descant (to O Come, All ye Faithful). A bit of a challenge as, contrary to the usual way of things, pitches were on the high side.

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Purcell’s monument

While on a shopping trip to London, I found time to go to evensong at Westminster Abbey, which I’d never done before (I’ve been at evensongs there, but singing them!) The attraction was Byrd’s Great Service, a setting I’ve never sung, though I live in hope of one day performing it. This was a little tentative in parts, probably because of having to be rehearsed alongside a huge quantity of Christmas music. Britten’s Hymn to the Virgin fared better.

I sat near the choir on some seating just east of the stalls; seating in the stalls appeared to be reserved for choir parents at this service. This service gave me an opportunity to do something for the first time: pay my respects at Purcell’s monument. This is only accessible for a fleeting moment before each service, and if you are singing the service yourself you are lined up ready to process in at that point. I’ve tried to see it before and failed. It’s a great shame that while monuments to poets are one of the Abbey’s main attractions, those to composers are neglected by comparison.

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Lots of carol-singing: in church

This year I’ve done/heard more carol services than usual; fortunately there was plenty of variety on offer. The festive marathon began with my singing at the Bathwick 9 Lessons, where there’d been a lot of illness in the soprano section. There were several settings which were completely new to me: John Marsh’s setting of Ding, Dong! Merrily on high (reminding me to contact him about the Lord Mayor’s Chapel Singers in the New Year), Our Blessed Lady’s Lullaby, a rather exposed piece by Bernard Rose, Dormi, Jesu by Dudley Holroyd, and A child is born in Bethlehem by Malcolm Archer, which seems to be well-known locally. Also some familiar numbers such as Ord’s Adam lay y-bounden and Here is the little door.

A few days later I heard the choir of Christ Church Bath perform among other things Tavener’s God is with us, a piece that is rather notorious for having a long unaccompanied section before the organ enters with a thunderous chord, although at least Tavener made the chord unrelated to what precedes, so there is some pitch latitude permitted. I’ve never sung it, so if they do it again I might try to get to insinuate myself!

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O magnum mysterium

This was the theme of the Chandos Singers’ Christmas concert, which we put together fairly quickly after the Russian folk-song performances. The first half of the concert was built around Victoria’s mass and motet on this text, both familiar repertoire to me. There were also settings of it by Willaert and the now-popular Lauridsen.

After the interval we performed seasonal music from the choir’s repertoire, though some of it was new to me, including a couple of pieces by members of the choir. Another new piece was Samuel Arnold’s 18th-century setting of Hark the Herald Angels Sing. We ended with some carols for the audience to join in. The organ in the chapel decided to play up, but fortunately only a couple of pieces had to be dropped as a result; the rest could be sung unaccompanied.

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The Golden Apples

The Chandos Singers ventured outside the usual concert format and took part in performances of Russian folk-tales given by Fire Springs (alongside on one evening a one-act opera by our conductor, which I wasn’t involved in) at the Rondo Theatre, Larkhall. Our musical accompaniment to these tales was essentially of three kinds: arrangements of folksongs used as scene-setting, songs with specially-written words used to advance or summarise the plot, and sound effects. (I realised I was overdue for doing some experimental vocal pieces with this choir). I discovered that there is a whole repertoire of arrangements of Russian folksongs which is more or less unknown to British choirs, perhaps because of the language barrier. But on the evidence of what we sang they are really worth getting to know – this was presumably where efforts to maintain the Russian choral tradition were concentrated in Soviet times when religious music was discouraged. I kept finding myself spontaneously singing bits of them at odd moments.

It was a change to be on stage and to watch storytellers at close quarters. For their part, they said ‘We’ve learnt a lot about choirs’!

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Bath Mozartfest 2011 (4): the Hallé

The final Mozartfest event attended by family members was the concert in the Forum given by the Hallé Orchestra. There was a brief talk at the beginning which addressed the question of whether the orchestra had performed in Bath before; there was no record of it but it seems likely that Barbirolli brought them there at some point. Also an anecdote about an early attempt to form an orchestra in Manchester which failed because all the players recruited turned out to be flautists. Curiously, I once sang at a carol concert in the same city whose orchestra (formed from those of various local schools) was also 40% flautists (with a similar number of clarinettists and a handful of players of other instruments). Imogen Cooper reappeared to play Mozart’s concerto in B flat K456. There were some selections from A Midsummer Night’s Dream and the concert ended with the New World Symphony. I’m told that the performances were lively rather than routine despite the standard repertoire. All too often orchestras visit Bath, and many of their players can’t be bothered to leave London so you are listening to something formed largely of deps, but that wasn’t the impression this time.

So we got to a lot of Mozartfest concerts, and weren’t too bothered by the relative absence of Mozart himself from the programmes this year. I wonder if this increase in diversity is to make up for the main Bath Festival being shorter and with fewer classical concerts?

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Bath Mozartfest 2011 (3): Padmore/Watkins/Drake and Grace Francis

We snapped up a few tickets while the Festival was in progress and so ended up going to lots of concerts. Some of the family went to hear Mark Padmore in the Guildhall accompanied by Julius Drake and alongside Richard Watkins on the horn. Schubert’s Auf dem Strom used all three performers: a rather odd piece rather along the lines of The Shepherd on the Rock.

This year’s Mozartfest featured a number of concerts which didn’t contain any music by Mozart, and as well as Beethoven (including An die ferne Geliebte and the Op. 17 horn sonata) and Schubert there were Britten’s first and third canticles. My daughter isn’t really a Britten fan and wasn’t won over by them. The third canticle in particular, Still falls the rain, is rather hindered by its libretto.

The following day I went to a piano recital by Grace Francis in the Guildhall. This did contain Mozart, the Fantasia in D minor, a piece I well remember learning myself. Then a change of programme, substituting the Appassionata for Beethoven’s Op. 90. Like the Mozart, this sounded rather tentative in places, though she did not make the usual mistake in this piece of sounding as if she were trying to destroy the piano. By the time she reached Rachmaninov’s Corelli variations she was well into her stride. These were not well known to me but made a good impression. The recital ended with the bicentenary composer, Liszt: Sonetto 104 del Petrarca and the first Mephisto Waltz, the latter piece curiously un-waltzlike most of the time. This recital was recorded for Radio 3, and I shall look out for Grace Francis’ name again.

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Bath Mozartfest 2011 (2): Imogen Cooper and the Sitkovetsky Trio

Some family members went to hear Imogen Cooper (a regular at festivals in Bath) playing at the Assembly Rooms. As a pupil of Alfred Brendel’s, she is very much in the same tradition of unshowy interpretation.  The least successful piece in her programme was Brahms’ arrangement of the theme and variations from his String Sextet Op. 18, which sounded rather cluttered, and if she couldn’t bring transparency to it then probably no-one else could.  Schumann’s Fantasiestücke came out best. Also on the programme were Haydn’s sonata in E flat H XVI:52 and Beethoven’s Tempest sonata.

The following day my husband went to hear the Sitkovetsky Trio in the Guildhall, playing Haydn and Schubert. This was reported to be very good, and he was especially impressed with the pianist, Wu Qian.

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Bath Mozartfest 2011 (1): The Sixteen

My first Mozartfest concert was The Sixteen in Bath Abbey. Having missed their ‘choral pilgrimage’ when it came to Wells a few weeks ago I wanted to catch them especially as they were doing Purcell.

Purcell is in fact a little outside their usual area and somehow this came over in the performances.

We heard the last part of The Indian Queen and the ode Come, Ye Sons of Arts. Yes, that is arts in the plural, as this performance used an edition informed by recent research, which attempted to undo what are believed to be later alterations. I was aware that it wasn’t quite the way I remembered it, but I’m not familiar enough with the piece (I’ve never performed it) to pick up all the details of the changes.  Robin Blaze sang Handel’s Eternal source of light divine, which was one of the highlights of the concert and we also heard the overture to Saul.

The concert ended with Dixit Dominus by Handel, a piece I’ve performed with various groups.  Tempi were very fast, in fact so much so that it appeared to demonstrate that they could perform the work that fast rather than to enhance the music.

The concert was popular and I was seated in the choir stalls behind the platform; it was appreciated that many of the choir turned round at the end to acknowledge our applause.

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Don Giovanni: Rodin meets Velasquez

It’s a bit like what they say about rats: you’re never far from a performance of Don Giovanni. This is one of my favourite operas, certainly my favourite by Mozart, and shamefully I’d never seen it.  At last I took the opportunity and went with my daughter to Welsh National Opera’s production when it visited Bristol.

I won’t use this post to comment much on the music; I was generally happy with singing and playing, though there were occasional waverings in tuning and I thought Robin Tritschler’s Don Ottavio a bit lightweight. But then he’s meant to be a bit of a wimp.

My problem with this performance (and this is borne out by the reviews) was largely a lack of consistency in the production.  The costumes and styling of the singers were beautifully detailed and evoked the Spain of a century or so before Mozart, complete with mantillas, pannier skirts and pointy beards.  But the set was based on Rodin’s Gates of Hell, and other Rodin statues did duty as makeshift furniture.  Now I don’t have a problem with directors applying an out-of-period concept to an opera, though they do have to sell it to me.  If the singers had been wearing more generic costume the effect wouldn’t have been so jarring, but in this case two very different time periods were being evoked simultaneously.

There was also some inconsistency among the acting styles: most were naturalistic, but Nuccia Focile’s Donna Elvira was much more histrionic.  I wasn’t very convinced either by the Commendatore’s statue coming to life.  In a set populated by real statues, he was obviously ‘whited up’ to resemble one, but ended up looking like someone trying to look like a statue.

So probably best to concentrate on the music and not look to hard at the stage, which is what I did.

Some other opinions: Independent, Observer, Guardian and Telegraph.

Coming up: reports of a whole lot of concerts from Bath’s Mozartfest.

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Fauré for All Souls

I joined the Bathwick choirs and friend for a liturgical performance of Fauré’s Requiem for All Souls’ Day. We sang the Libera Me early on in the service, which at least prevents you from feeling that this piece only takes off in the sixth movement!

If you have one or more Bathwick copies of Duruflé’s Requiem, please return them. They went missing a few years ago. No one would want music in their choir library that really belonged elsewhere.

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I attend a Choral Evensong broadcast

For many years I’ve followed Radio 3’s Choral Evensong broadcasts, and have listened to them whenever possible.  I’d never been to one – why bother when Radio 3 brings it into your own home?  But I made a special case for the recent broadcast from Merton College, Oxford, where I was once a student and sang in the choir.

The service was a mixture of old (Victoria O quam gloriosum, and Smith responses) conducted by Peter Philips and new(er) (Howells in G and Vaughan Williams’ Valiant-for-Truth) conducted by Ben Nicholas.  I also appreciated having the full psalms for the day.  The choir weren’t in their usual stalls, but a little further west, nearer the organ, and arranged in a U formation across the chapel, with microphones at the apex. This had the effect of drastically cutting back on the resonance of the Chapel, both in the building and on air.

I was very impressed with the standard, which didn’t seem to me to have the common college choir problem of relatively weak tenors and basses (though I learn from a message board that there was some back-row reinforcement on the day).  Tuning, blend, ensemble seemed to come together effortlessly and the service flowed in a calm and reverent way without lengthy descriptions of the venue or pointless descants.  I have only two minor criticisms.  One is that the service ran for only 50 minutes and there would have been time for an office hymn as well as the one at the end.  Also, I thought that the choir was slightly out with the organ at one point in the Nunc Dimittis; I would lay the blame for this largely on the instrument, which is badly located and scheduled for replacement. When I was a student it had no CCTV, just a mirror and we hardly ever used it for accompanying anthems or canticles (when we did canticle settings, that is!)

After the service I was a guest at the launch party for the choir’s new CD.  Here I was able to mix with some members of the choir and other guests, and fortunately the conversation was mostly about music, rather than about my job, or my interlocutor’s in-laws, or some other less interesting topic.

I learned more about how the choir works these days.  It appears that most of those who aren’t choral scholars aren’t Mertonians. This contrasts with what I found in Cambridge, where I once auditioned for one of the better chapel choirs and was told that I would have been good enough if I’d been a member of the College, but that they required a higher standard from people outside!  But it does also recall the Merton choir as it was when I came up, which included a large proportion of non-Mertonians; I think this was largely a hangover from the time when the College did not admit women but had a mixed choir, so it had to take women from elsewhere.  Current members of the choir also got to hear from me about what the choir was like when I sang in it, and were duly appalled that we only sang a proper Mag and Nunc setting once a year!

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