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SEEN AND HEARD FESTIVAL PREVIEW
Three Choirs Festival 2008: A
Preview by John Quinn (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 2008 Festival will be the 280th meeting
of the Three Choirs. Each summer the festival rotates between the
cathedral cities of Gloucester, Hereford and Worcester. This year
it’s Worcester’s turn to host the Festival, which runs from 2 to 9
August. The Festival will be directed by Adrian Lucas, the Master of
the Music at Worcester Cathedral.
It’s a varied programme and, as usual, there’s a good deal of
British music to be heard. The festival will mark three
anniversaries. Both the fiftieth anniversary of the death of Ralph
Vaughan Williams and the centenary of the birth of Olivier Messiaen
are being widely celebrated, and rightly so. It’s good to see the
Three Choirs joining in those festivities. But hats off to them for
marking the centenary of another composer, who is attracting less
attention this year. Howard Ferguson (1908-1999) left a much smaller
body of compositions than did RVW or Messiaen and he is not so
substantial a figure. But his output contains some fine music and
I’m delighted to see that his Overture for an occasion is to
be played in the Philharmonia concert, conducted by Adrian Lucas (8
August, 19.45). Even more welcome is the inclusion of one of
Ferguson’s most substantial works, the choral piece Amor Langueo.
This can be heard in another of Adrian Lucas’s programmes (4 August,
19.45) with the splendid James Gilchrist as tenor soloist.
That programme also includes what is billed as the world première of
A British Symphony by Andrew Gant. In fact the
première should have taken place in February when the Brighton
Philharmonic Orchestra was due to play it but, according to Times
Online, at the eleventh hour the conductor, Barry Wordsworth
announced to the astonished audience that he “did not believe” in
the work and would not play it. Instead Mendelssohn’s Italian
Symphony was substituted. I don’t know whether the piece was due to
be heard at Worcester anyway or was taken up by the festival
following the controversy at Brighton. Whatever has gone on behind
the scenes, an audience will finally have the chance to decide for
themselves on the merits of this work by the Organist of the Chapel
Royal.
The Gant symphony is included in what strikes me as a rather odd
programme, which also includes the aforementioned Ferguson piece and
Anthony Payne’s reconstruction of Elgar’s march Pomp and
Circumstance No. 6 – though Payne’s name or any reference to
this as a reconstruction is carelessly omitted from the festival
brochure. This march was included in last year’s Gloucester
programme as well. The programme is completed by Tchaikovsky’s
Romeo and Juliet, which seems a little odd when the concert is
billed as “A programme of romance and ceremony that celebrates all
that is great about Britain.” I suppose Shakespeare provides the
British link.
A prime focus for any Three Choirs Festival, of course, is the major
choral and orchestral concerts each night in the cathedral. There
are some treats in store, starting with Elgar’s The Apostles
(2 August, 19.45), which Adrian Lucas will conduct. The Philharmonia
Orchestra, resident for the week, and the Festival Chorus will take
part with a sextet of soloists. A masterpiece on a much more
intimate scale is Bach’s Christmas Oratorio in which Edward
Higginbottom will direct the choirs of the three Cathedrals and the
Academy of Ancient Music. The quartet of soloists includes Sarah
Connolly and Michael George (5 August, 18.00). Another guest
conductor is Martyn Brabbins, who will lead a programme that
includes the Four Sea Interludes from ‘Peter Grimes’
(Britten) and Vaughan Williams’s wonderful Sea Symphony (7
August, 19.45).
However, though these concerts are enticing I’m afraid I can’t
register any enthusiasm whatsoever for the closing concert in which
John Wilson conducts the Philharmonia in a programme entitled
‘Classic British Film Music’ (9 August, 19.45) The concert will
include film music by the likes of Vaughan Williams, Richard Rodney
Bennett, Walton, Eric Coates and Malcolm Arnold. I most certainly
don’t denigrate film music and some of the music on offer in this
programme is of high quality. However, I have to question the ending
of a Three Choirs Festival with not a singer in sight. I guess the
programme has been devised with an eye to the box office but I think
it’s a regrettable miscalculation.
On a more positive note, the orchestral concert on 7 August, already
mentioned, will include a very pleasant ceremony when the RVW
Society presents a lifetime achievement award to Sir David
Willcocks. What a richly deserved honour and how fitting that the
presentation should take place in the cathedral which he graced as
its one time Director of Music. The concert will be followed by a
reception in his honour.
Another distinguished British musician will visit on the following
day when Dame Gillian Weir gives a varied and interesting recital to
inaugurate the cathedral’s new Kenneth Tickell quire organ (8
August, 11.00)
Those who like to hear small, expert choirs and vocal ensembles will
be well catered for. The King’s Singers, currently celebrating their
fortieth anniversary season, will perform in the marvellous
surroundings of Pershore Abbey (4 August, 14.30). Gothic Voices will
present a programme of medieval love songs in Great Witley Church (6
August, 11.00) and the renowned choral trainer, Ralph Allwood, will
bring the choir of the Eton Open Choral Course to Tewkesbury Abbey
to give a very tempting programme consisting mainly of polyphonic
and twentieth-century choral pieces (8 August, 14.30)
With chamber music, organ recitals and, of course, the daily riches
of choral evensong as well the Festival caters for a wide range of
tastes.
Full details of the
Festival are available at
http://www.3choirs.org/ Bookings can be made either online or
by contacting the Festival Ticket Office at Worcester Porcelain
Museum, Severn Street, Worcester, WR1 2ND United Kingdom. Telephone
01905 616200.
John Quinn
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