|
|
|
Editorial
Board
London Editor:
(London UK)
Melanie
Eskenazi
Regional Editor:
(UK regions and Worldwide)
Bill
Kenny
Webmaster:
Bill
Kenny
Music Web Webmaster:
Len
Mullenger
|
MusicWeb is a
subscription-free site
Clicking Google adverts on our pages helps us keep it that way
Seen
and Heard Festival Preview
Cheltenham Music
Festival 2007:
a preview by John Quinn
The sixty-third Cheltenham Music
Festival runs from 6 to 21 July, a
week later than was the case last
year.
In 2006, Festival Director, Martyn
Brabbins, chose
Scotland as the theme running through
the Festival. This year the focus is
on America and the diversity of
American music. Although this is
mainly a matter of subjective taste I
find the programmes this year much
more enticing. Last year the festival
had a composer-in-residence, Sally
Beamish. No composer is featured in
such a way this time round.
One thing that strikes me quite
forcibly this year is the almost
complete absence of British
professional orchestras. The BBC
Concert Orchestra gives the opening
concert and that’s it. The Brno
Philharmonic Orchestra is in residence
for the final weekend, taking part in
three events, including two formal
evening concerts, but that’s the
extent of the participation by
professional orchestras. If that’s
come about for budgetary reasons then
it’s a matter for regret – and,
perhaps, a sign of the times. However,
if it’s a conscious decision by Martyn
Brabbins and the Festival organisers
then I think it’s a misjudgement; the
programme feels a bit unbalanced as a
result.
However, there are many other enticing
events on offer and if what follows
is, inevitably, a bit of a personal
list of preferences I can say that
there should be something to most
tastes.
Dealing first with the aforementioned
orchestral concerts, the BBC Concert
Orchestra programme, under Rumon Gamba
features deservedly popular American
repertoire (July 6). Barber’s Violin
Concerto will be played by Chloë Hanslip
while Nancy Gustafson sings the gorgeous
Knoxville:
Summer of 1915.
Bernstein’s West Side Story
Overture will be played and Robert
Russell Bennett’s colourful ”Symphonic
Portrait” from Gershwin’s Porgy
and Bess promises to be great
fun. At the other end of the festival
Wayne Marshall will conduct the Brno
Philharmonic in more Bernstein (the
effervescent Candide Overture
and the Symphonic Dances from West
Side Story) and Gershwin, including
the Rhapsody in Blue, in which
he’ll also play the piano solo (July
20). The following night the orchestra
brings down the festival curtain under
the direction of Petr Altrichter.
Their Anglo-American programme includes
Delius’s
Appalachia
and Elgar’s Sea Pictures. In
the Elgar the soloist will be Sarah
Connolly, whose recent recording I
much admired (review)
and it will be good to hear
her sing the work live. The final
work in the concert will be Dvořák’s
‘New
World’ Symphony. It’s a glorious work
but, dare I say, just a little routine
as a festival finale?
The Festival usually comes up with
some enticing song recitals and this
year is no exception. Top of the list
for me is a programme of French and
American song by Dame Felicity Lott,
making one of her always-welcome
visits to her home town (July 8).
Accompanied by Malcolm Martineau
she’ll be offering a selection of
mélodies by composers including
Gounod, Fauré and Chabrier. Since Dame
Felicity is one of the finest
exponents of French mélodies
this is a prospect to savour. However,
the second half lures me even more
strongly for it features songs by Cole
Porter and by the two finest American
art song composers, Samuel Barber and
Ned Rorem.
Malcolm Martineau will also be
involved in another very attractive
song recital, when he accompanies
Jonathan Lemalu in recital (12 July).
On the bill will be songs by Britten,
Copland and Quilter. There’ll also be
a selection of William Bolcom’s
Cabaret Songs and more Samuel Barber,
his wonderfully evocative
Dover Beach.
To complete a trio of must-hear
singers, Sir Willard White presents a
Tribute to Paul Robeson (July 18).
This event includes music by Gershwin
and Kern; a selection of Spirituals
and some other traditional songs. The
evening will be bound together by a
narrative of Robeson’s life story.
One of the highlights of last year’s
festival was a recital of Beethoven
piano sonatas by Paul Lewis (see
review.) Lewis is back
this time with an even more challenging
Beethoven programme, comprising the
last three sonatas, Opp 109-111. That,
for me, will be unmissable.
I’m equally keen to hear the City of
Birmingham Symphony Chorus in a
programme of English and (mainly)
American music (July 11). Under their
Director, Simon Halsey, they’ll
perform Bernstein’s marvellous
Chichester Psalms and Tippett’s
Spirituals from A Child of Our Time.
There’ll also be music by the highly
regarded British composer, Julian
Anderson, and by two Americans whose
music has come in for a good deal of
attention recently, Morten Lauridsen
and Eric Whitacre.
The weekend of 14-15 July will
showcase some of BBC Radio 3’s New
Generation artists. The four concerts
will include appearances by flautist
Sharon Bezaly and baritone Ronan
Collett (July 14) in a programme which
will include the première, by Mr.
Collett, of a new work by the
distinguished American composer,
Dominick Argento. In another of these
concerts tenor Andrew Kennedy will be
joined by the Aronowitz Ensemble in
Housman song cycles by Gurney (Ludlow
and Teme, which deserves to be
much better known) and Vaughan
Williams (On Wenlock Edge). The
underrated Elgar Piano Quintet will
also be on the menu. (July 15)
There are a few intriguing events, as
there should be at any festival. Top
of that particular list is the
appearance of The King’s Singers at
Tewkesbury Abbey (July 9). They’ll be
joined by period ensemble L’Arpeggiata
in a programme entitled “Los
Impossibles”. This is devoted to music
from eighteenth century
Mexico that represents a fusion of
local indigenous music and European
music of the High Baroque. More
familiar fayre, but no less
enterprising, is offered in the shape
of an evening of Broadway Cabaret by
Kim Criswell and Wayne Marshall. This
event, in the wonderful surroundings
of the Pittville Pump Room also
includes a three-course supper (July
16).
And finally, as they say, aficionados
of chamber music will have much to
engage their attentions. My pride of
place goes to two marvellous British
artists, cellist Natalie Clein and
pianist Kathryn Stott, who come
together for a morning recital of
music by Shostakovich, Britten, Bridge
and Elgar (July 20). With artists of
that calibre distinction is
guaranteed.
With fifty-nine major concerts and a
plethora of other events going on it’s
impossible, in a short preview such as
this, to do more than scratch the
surface of the festival programme. It
promises to be a fascinating, varied
and richly entertaining couple of
weeks in the gracious town of
Cheltenham.
Full details of the complete festival
programme can be obtained at www.cheltenhamfestivals.com
or from the Festival Box Office at
Town Hall,
Imperial Square, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire,
GL50 1QA, United Kingdom. The Box
Office telephone number is 01242 227979
John Quinn
Back
to the Top
Back to the Index Page
|
Seen and Heard, one of the longest established live
music review web sites on the Internet, publishes original reviews
of recitals, concerts and opera performances from the UK and internationally.
We update often, and sometimes daily, to bring you fast reviews,
each of which offers a breadth of knowledge and attention to performance
detail that is sometimes difficult for readers to find elsewhere.
Seen and Heard
publishes interviews with musicians, musicologists and directors
which feature both established artists and lesser known performers.
We also feature articles on the classical music industry and we
use other arts media to connect between music and culture in its
widest terms.
Seen and Heard
aims to present the best in new criticism from writers with a radical
viewpoint and welcomes contributions from all nations. If you would
like to find out more email Regional
Editor Bill Kenny. |
|
| |
|
Contributors: Marc
Bridle, Martin Anderson, Patrick Burnson, Frank Cadenhead, Colin
Clarke, Paul Conway, Geoff Diggines, Sarah Dunlop, Evan Dickerson
Melanie Eskenazi (London Editor) Robert J Farr, Abigail Frymann,
Göran Forsling, Simon Hewitt-Jones, Bruce Hodges,Tim Hodgkinson,
Martin Hoyle, Bernard Jacobson, Tristan Jakob-Hoff, Ben Killeen,
Bill Kenny (Regional Editor), Ian Lace, John Leeman, Sue Loder,Jean
Martin, Neil McGowan, Bettina Mara, Robin Mitchell-Boyask, Simon
Morgan, Aline Nassif, Anne Ozorio, Ian Pace, John Phillips,
Jim Pritchard, John Quinn, Peter Quantrill, Paul Serotsky, Harvey Steiman, Christopher Thomas,
Alex Verney-Elliott,Raymond Walker, John Warnaby,
Hans-Theodor Wolhfahrt, Peter Grahame Woolf (Founder & Emeritus
Editor)
|
Site design: Bill Kenny
2004 |