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Seen
and Heard Festival Preview
Three Choirs
Festival 2007:
John Quinn looks forward to the
programme in Gloucester (JQ)
The Three Choirs Festival, which can
trace its origins back to the early
eighteenth century, is probably the
oldest musical festival in the world
and the 2007 Festival will be the 280th
meeting of the Three Choirs. Each
summer the festival rotates between
the cathedral cities of
Gloucester, Hereford and Worcester and
this year it’s Gloucester’s turn to
be host. The Festival runs from 4 to
12 August.
With this Festival Andrew Nethsingha
will bid farewell to Gloucester for he
relinquishes his post as Director of
Music at Gloucester Cathedral this
summer. He’s moving on to another very
prestigious post, succeeding David
Hill as Director of Music at St.
John’s College, Cambridge. Mr
Nethsingha has drawn up an ambitious
and varied programme for his Three
Choirs swansong, including several
events that mark the 150th
anniversary of the birth of a composer
whose name is inextricably linked with
the Festival, Sir Edward Elgar.
The major works by Elgar to be heard
include the First symphony in a
concert by the Philharmonia Orchestra
under Martyn Brabbins (5th August),
which will also offer a chance to hear
Tippett’s Triple Concerto. Andrew
Nethsingha himself conducts The
Dream of Gerontius (7 August) with
James Gilchrist in the title role and
with Sarah Connolly and Roderick
Williams completing the line-up of
soloists. One Elgar work to which I’m
looking forward especially is The
Spirit of England, which Adrian
Lucas, Director of Music at Worcester
Cathedral, conducts on 10th August.
This magnificent triptych of settings
of poems by Laurence Binyon is Elgar
at his finest and its relative neglect
never ceases to amaze me. Holst’s
Planets completes this exciting
programme.
There’s one other major Elgar work in
the Festival, the ‘Enigma’
Variations. This appears in a
programme conducted by the doyen of
English conductors, Vernon Handley, on
9th August. Handley also offers
Vaughan Williams’s serene The Lark
Ascending (with James Clark as
solo violinist) and a rare opportunity
to hear Bax’s First symphony in
concert. But inexplicably – and
maddeningly for those of us who will
be at work during the day – this
concert has been scheduled for the
afternoon, starting at 14.30. I find
it amazing that the Festival should
engage such a distinguished conductor
to lead such an enticing and important
programme and yet not make the event
one of the high-profile evening
concerts.
Before leaving Elgar I must mention
another very enterprising programme on
the opening afternoon of the Festival
(4th August) when Mark Finch will
conduct the Gloucestershire Symphony
Orchestra in a programme that opens
with Anthony Payne’s recent
reconstruction of the march Pomp
and Circumstance No. 6. I heard
the broadcast première of this piece
last year and felt that, while it was
interesting, the musical material
wasn’t a patch on Payne’s superb
realisation of the Third Symphony.
Nonetheless, it’s good to see the
piece get a Three Choirs airing in a
programme that also includes Ivor
Gurney’s War Elegy, which these
same performers premièred in 2003.
They also perform music by Delius and
Howells as well as Bridge’s wonderful
The Sea.
That same evening Andrew Nethsingha
directs Britten’s War Requiem
with Judith Howarth, James Gilchrist
and Stephen Roberts as soloists. This
is a piece that has always sharply
divided critical opinion but I’m
firmly in the camp of those who admire
the work and I’m sure it will be one
of the festival's “hot tickets”. I
hope audiences will also flock to hear
the evening concert on 6th August when
the fascinating programme includes
Vaughan Williams’s radiant Serenade
to Music, happily in its original
version for 16 solo voices. This will
be followed by a première – the only
one in this year’s Festival. Robin
Holloway has orchestrated Debussy’s
piano work, En Blanc et Noir
and it receives its first
UK performance at this concert. And as
if all this were not enough, there’s
also a welcome chance to hear Herbert
Howells’s Hymnus Paradisi. I
regard this as one of the most
ecstatic and richest of all English
choral works and this will be an
unmissable event for me. The guest
conductor then will be Christopher
Robinson, no stranger to Three
Choirs, having been Organist of
Worcester Cathedral in the past. Since
then he’s pursued a distinguished
career as a choral conductor and this
programme should be very safe in his
experienced hands.
Other major evening events in the
Cathedral include a performance of
Monteverdi’s Vespers by the
crack Birmingham-based choir and
period instrument ensemble, Ex
Cathedra, directed by Jeffrey Skidmore
(9th August). There’s also the closing
concert (11th August) when Andrew
Nethsingha will direct Mahler’s
massive Eighth Symphony.
For lovers of chamber music there are
some enticing prospects. There’s a
late night recital by guitarist Craig
Ogden (6th August) and the
Micallef-Inanga Piano Duo will perform
Robin Holloway’s Gilded Goldbergs,
a work they’ve recorded for Hyperion,
at St Mary de Lode church (7th August,
14.00).
There are several organ recitals,
including one by John Scott (11th
August 10.30). In addition each of the
Assistant Organists of the three
cathedrals will give a recital at
different stages during the week.
Solo song recitals include an
appearance by tenor Andrew Kennedy
(9th August 10.30) and one by Roderick
Williams (11th August 14.30). Both of
these fine singers will benefit from
partnership with Iain Burnside.
Another notable pianist, David
Owen-Norris will join Soprano Amada
Pitt for a programme of songs and
piano pieces by Elgar entitled ‘The
Unknown Elgar’. (10th August 10.30)
Finally, a mention of two other choral
concerts. Michael Brewer will bring
the National Youth Choir to the
Cathedral for a wide-ranging programme
that goes from Josquin to John Joubert,
whose 80th birthday falls
this year. The Festival pays a visit
to Tewkesbury Abbey for a recital by
the superb Rodolfus Choir under their
director, Ralph Allwood (8th August
11.00) They too will sing a very
varied programme, including pieces by
Elgar, Vaughan Williams, Parry and the
contemporary American composer, Eric
Whitacre, whose music has attracted a
good deal of favourable attention
recently.
It’s a varied and attractive Festival
programme and in this note I’ve only
scratched the surface of what’s on
offer. The Philharmonia Orchestra is
in residence throughout the festival
and, unless otherwise stated, they and
the Festival Chorus, the lynchpin of
any Three Choirs Festival, will be
involved in all the major concerts in
the cathedral. I’m looking forward
immensely to a feast of music in
Gloucester.
Full details of the Festival are
available at
http://www.3choirs.org/ Bookings
can be made either online or by
contacting the Box Office at 7c,
College Green, Gloucester, GL1 2LX
United Kingdom. Telephone 01452
381638
John Quinn
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