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Editor - Bill Kenny
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Deputy Editor - Bob Briggs
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SEEN AND HEARD
FESTIVAL PREVIEW
The Third
English Music Festival, Friday 22nd to Monday 25th
May 2009:
A preview (BK)
The English Music Festival returns to
Oxfordshire this May with an exciting and wide-ranging programme of
all-British compositions from Early Music to Festival Commissions,
and a world premiere by no less a composer than Delius.
Building on the successes of the first two Festivals, held in and
around Dorchester-on-Thames, EMF Founder-Director Em Marshall is
bringing the EMF back to Oxfordshire from Friday 22nd to
Monday 25th May 2009 (Whitsun Bank Holiday weekend).
A series of 14 concerts and recitals by world-class artists will
showcase Britain’s unique and diverse musical heritage, in historic
locations such as the mediaeval
Dorchester Abbey and the imposing Chapel and Silk Hall at Radley
College.
The Festival opens on the evening of Friday 22nd May with
a major concert in Dorchester Abbey performed by the highly-esteemed
vocal ensemble Vox Musica and the Southbank
Sinfonia Strings, which will showcase overlooked gems by
composers such as Finzi, Vaughan Williams, Howells, Holst and Dyson
World premiere performance
The following evening, the BBC Concert Orchestra conducted by David
Lloyd-Jones will perform the EMF-commissioned Festival
Overture by Matthew Curtis. Following on from this will be rare
performances of Havergal Brian’s Reverie, Elgar’s Sanguine
Fan, Vaughan Williams’s
Willow Wood –
featuring baritone Jeremy Huw Williams – and Frederick
Cliffe’s Violin Concerto with acclaimed soloist Philippe
Graffin. Some of these works have not seen performances in a hundred
years.
The programme concludes with the World Premiere concert performance
of Delius’s tone poem Hiawatha.
Informal late evening concerts are a favourite with concert-goers,
and this year proves no exception, with the effervescent pianist and
EMF regular David Owen Norris repeating his programme of infectious
and toe-tapping Billy Mayerl.
By contrast, the exciting early music group, Joglaresa, will
give a concert entitled Harp of Bones; a programme of
mediaeval and traditional English song, “demonstrating concerns of
life, love, and death that remain disturbingly contemporary”, and
which will provide an atmospheric end to Sunday evening.
The Canons Scholars,
who proved so popular at last year’s Festival, will perform works by
Boyce, Eccles and Purcell (in the 350th anniversary year
of his birth). “Audience members expressed their enjoyment at last
year’s concert by the group, which turned out to be one of the
highlights of the event, so we are really looking forward to their
return”, adds Em Marshall.
The final day opens in Dorchester Abbey and features international
counter-tenor James Bowman, accompanied by Andrew Plant, in a
programme of rare songs ranging from Purcell, Quilter and Britten to
a song premier by the young and promising composer Tom Rose, written
especially for this concert at the Festival. The programme will also
include the haunting Return to Stromness by Peter Maxwell
Davis.
As well as pre-concert talks, the EMF is pleased to be hosting a
Seminar entitled “Is there a future for the British Choral
Tradition?” where a panel including Hilary Davan Wetton, Brian Kay,
James Bowman and Dr Andrew Plant will be discussing
their experiences and thoughts on this topic.
The Festival concludes in style with the City of London Choir
conducted by Hilary Davan Wetton performing Vaughan Williams’s
Mass in G, and Sun, Moon, Stars and Man, Foulds’s
Keltic Lament, Holst’s Hymns from the Rig Veda, and
Britten’s Choral Dances from ‘Gloriana’.
“Holst was captivated by ancient Indian philosophy - he understood
that this philosophical system had something deep and true to offer
mankind, and he wrote a number of works that set Sanskrit texts,
such as the Hymns from the Rig Veda. Unhappy with the translations
then available, Holst taught himself the Sanskrit language to enable
him to produce more accurate translations of these great texts",
comments the festival's Managing and Artistic Director Em Marshall.
Other highlights of this year’s Festival will include David Owen
Norris playing Lambert’s dazzling Piano Sonata, as well as
music by Quilter, Moeran, and Bax’s second piano sonata. The
Bridge Quartet, on their return visit to the EMF, will perform
String Quartets by Elgar and Rawsthorne and Bridge’s Piano
Quintet, with Michael Dussek on piano. Oxford
Liedertafel,
will perform English part-songs in the atmospheric surroundings of
Radley College Chapel, and the Musicians of All Saints will
present a programme including popular works by Parry, Bridge, Holst,
Elgar and Ireland.
The
Festival provides an ideal Whitsun break
Patrons may like to know that there is a designated shuttle bus
which transfers concert-goers to venues in plenty of time for each
concert, so there is no need to worry about finding venues or even
the need to bring the car. There are
many lovely places to stay and to eat in the area.
Tickets for the Festival are on sale
now. Full details,
are on the EMF website,
www.englishmusicfestival.org.uk
and the complete programme is available
here.
Bill Kenny
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