|
Elisabeth Murdoch Hall, Melbourne Recital Centre |
One of Stravinsky’s less popular works from the 1920s like Oedipus Rex which I’ve heard live once, The Fairy’s Kiss is based on (mainly) lesser-known pieces by Tchaikovsky. Originally a ballet, it never captured popular acclaim like the three early Paris scores for Diaghilev or even Jeu de cartes which you can come across once in a blue moon. Anyway, this Musica Viva Australia version is a four-movement Divertimento for violin and piano that the composer put together from his orchestral score for Samuel Dushkin in 1932. Tonight, we hear it from American-Canadian violinist Leila Josefowicz and plain American pianist John Novacek and it comes at the end of their endeavours, which begin with the Debussy Violin Sonata of 1917, the composer’s final major work and a remarkably buoyant one. In the middle come Szymanowski’s 1915 Mythes, three of them: The Fountain of Arethusa, Narcissus, and Dryads and Pan – this last famous as asking for quarter tones (well, he gets the violin to lower its D string, I think; the harmonics passages are far more intriguing). And the musicians give us a new commission (partly from Musica Viva) from British writer Charlotte Bray: Mriya, a four-movement tribute to the people of Ukraine and their current state of persecution. Tickets are $59 or $79; Under 40s pay $49; Under 18s are up for $20. There’s a $7 booking fee for the standard seats, which is a lot in these straitened times and when you consider what you’re paying for in terms of service. |
Melbourne Chamber Orchestra |
Elisabeth Murdoch Hall, Melbourne Recital Centre |
Thursday July 9 at 7:30 pm |
Guest for the Melbourne Chamber Orchestra in this exercise is accordionist James Crabb, familiar to many of us from his appearances with the Australian Chamber Orchestra. His main contribution to this program seems to be his own arrangement of C.P.E. Bach’s Harpsichord Concerto in A Wq 29 of 1753 which I can’t find in any collection, although there is a recording available. God knows there are a lot of such works by this composer; about 40 by my count. Anyway, this exercise will be preceded by Sophie Rowell leading her string forces in a Rameau Suite from Six concerts en Sextuor which I assume refers to the arrangements collated by Saint-Saens when he set about organizing his predecessor’s catalogue. That arrangement used winds; this one, constructed by Stanislaw Skrowaczeski in 1969, involves five movements for strings alone, ending with the well-known La poule. Australian writer Aaron Wyatt is also contributing an arrangement to this program in the concert’s title work, which was written to a MCO commission last year for string quartet and celebrates the temperate forests around this city and the composer’s Western Australian home. We have a substantial detour for Argentinian guitarist Tomas Gubitsch‘s In a tango state of mind concerto for accordion and strings of 2011; again, information is thin about this work. Finally, Crabb finishes us off with his arrangements of a selection of Scottish Traditional: I can smell the heather from here. Tickets range from $75 to $150; concession/senior discounts are $15/$20 less, depending where you sit; Under 40s get mediocre-to-poor seats for $40; students and children can get seats anywhere for $30. Everybody has to front up with the Recital Centre’s Transaction Fee of between $4 and $8.50 per order online or by phone. Good luck with that. |
This program will be repeated on Sunday July 12 at 2 pm. |
Elisabeth Murdoch Hall, Melbourne Recital Centre |
In another varied and searching program, the Omega Ensemble from Sydney graces the Recital Centre with a mixed bill of fare that aims to expose various composers’ mental states, two of the four works on display coming from that fountainhead of self-examination, the United States. First we hear John Corigliano‘s Soliloquy for clarinet and string quartet, extracted in 1995 from the composer’s Clarinet Concerto of 1977 and a meditation-of-sorts on his father’s death. Later, we hear Jessie Montgomery‘s Rounds from 2022 which is a sort of concerto/rondo for piano and strings, lasts about 15 minutes, and is here enjoying its first performance outside the American mainland, as far as I can see. For our local delectation, Omega artistic director David Rowden heads the premiere of a new clarinet concerto by David Stanhope. But the evening’s main example of introspection comes with Schubert’s Death and the Maiden String Quartet No. 14 of 1824, but in a transcription by Mahler begun in 1896 and left unfinished. As I understand it, Mahler’s projected expansion to string orchestra format was completed by British musicians Donald Mitchell and David Matthews and published in 1984. Whether in its original garb or vested in its new clothes, this score is a magnificently public manifestation of psychological stress under control. Entry cost for normals ranges from $54 to $139, concession $10 cheaper; Under 30s prices range from $39 to $114. Never forget that, if you order online or by phone, the Recital Centre charges a fee of somewhere between $4 and $8.50; I’d be tempted to show up on the night – with cash. |
SPRINGS IN THE CITY – FOUR LAST SONGS |
Stewart Kelly and Music by the Springs Festival |
Primrose Potter Salon, Melbourne Recital Centre |
This recital concludes with Richard Strauss’s melting reminiscence of Germany’s Late Romantic era splendour, even if it will lack the lustrous orchestral fabric that supports every soprano who undertakes the 1948 cycle as it was intended. Tonight, it’s a task for Kiandra Howarth who will be accompanied by pianist Stewart Kelly, Orchestra Victoria concertmaster violinist Sulki Yu, and her OV colleague, principal Andrew Young on horn, all taking part in a new arrangement by somebody. Yes, there’s a soaring violin solo in Beim Schlafengehen and an indispensible horn part through Im Abendrot, but Stewart will be hard pressed to fill in most of this richly-textured score. Howarth and Kelly also present Korngold’s 3 Lieder Op. 22, completed in 1929 and rarely heard in live performance despite their approachability. The recital’s first half moves a tad further back in time to Brahms, with Howarth working through some ‘Selected songs’ by Brahms in which I’d suggest only Kelly will be a present sustaining voice. And the singer can enjoy some rest time as the three instrumentalists take on the Horn Trio of 1865: the first significant work in this instrumental shape and still surpassing fair, despite many a competing contemporary voice. It will be interesting to see whether or not Young plays a natural horn, as the composer intended. But then, does anybody these days? Seats are $79, concession $69, student $30, as well as the MRC’s floating transaction fee of anywhere between $4 and $8.50 if booking by phone or online – pretty unavoidable, more’s the pity, because of the venue’s small space. |
ANDREA LAM PLAYS TCHAIKOVSKY |
Melbourne Symphony Orchestra |
Hamer Hall, Arts Centre Melbourne |
Thursday July 16 at 7:30 pm |
Well-known to ABC TV viewers (well, some of them) for her participation in The Piano series and coping womanfully with the multiplicity of distractions offered by host Amanda Keller, Andrea Lam appears here in a great warhorse of the repertoire: Tchaikovsky’s B flat minor Concerto No. 1 of 1875. It’s a hard ask of any pianist because it’s a technically taxing test still and because all of us have our own ideas of the perfect reading (mine is Van Cliburn with Kondrashin and the RCA Symphony in 1958; nobody has equalled his stunning double-octaves). Good luck to this talented performer in her endeavours because everyone will be listening closely. Conductor Tabita Berglund from Norway takes us a tad further east after interval for the Sibelius Symphony No. 2 from 1901-2. This is the composer’s most popular work in the form and it’s not hard to see why with its chain of successful melodies and a sweeping inexorability that leads to a spirit-lifting, exuberant finale. A little further west to Sweden and we’re in the land of tonight’s overture composer. Wilhelm Stenhammar wrote his Excelsior! in 1896 and it was almost immediately neglected; a pity as it stands as a fine instance of vigour in composition with (understandably) plenty of vaulting ambition. Here’s an excellent Russo-Nordic program, particularly welcome as Melbourne reaches mid-winter. Ticket prices fall between $51 and $142; concession holders pay $5 less; children gain access for $20. And there’s also the $7 booking fee per order online or by phone; unfortunately unavoidable, I think, because it’s a popular program and could be sold out well before the date. |
This program will be repeated on Friday July 17 in Costa Hall, Geelong at 7:30 pm. and in Hamer Hall on Saturday July 18 at 7:30 pm. |
THA TAILOR OF TIME – 40 YEARS OF ELISION |
Melbourne Recital Centre and ELISION |
Elisabeth Murdoch Hall, Melbourne Recital Centre |
Thursday July 16 at 7:30 pm |
For this celebratory concert, ELISION artistic director Daryl Buckley has assembled a large cast of musicians, most of them involved in a performance of the event’s title piece written by Liza Lim in 2023 for the Ensemble intercontemporain of Paris. To begin, however, some members perform Mexican-born veteran Julio Estrada‘s Yuunohui’ tlapoa’ nahui’ ehecatl, which is a part of the composer’s large cycle of works stretching from 1985 to 2012 that take their names from the springboard of the Yuunohui’ title; this one seems to be a nonet. We launch straight after into Welsh writer Richard Barrett‘s elsewhen, a 20-minute four-movement work that is part of a large-scale construct called PSYCHE which seems to have been written for Elision between 2018 and 2024 (and which I can’t find in the composer’s online catalogue); this also presents as a nonet, although one source describes it as an octet. Perth-born composer Kate Milligan is represented by her newly-written Great Dog! (as seen by the River) which is a quintet. Lim’s large-scale score involves oboe (Peter Veale) and harp (Marshall McGuire) as soloists with 28 other supporting musicians including flutes (Paula Rae, Eliza Shephard), oboe (Niamh Dell), clarinets (Richard Haynes), bassoons (Ben Roidl-Ward, James Aylward), horns (unknown), trumpets (Tristram Williams), trombones (Benjamin Marks, Cian Malikides), euphonium (Max Gregg), percussion (Peter Neville and/or Aditya Ryan Bhat and/or Rebecca Lloyd-Jones), piano (Alexander Waite), keyboard (Jacob Abela), violins (Austin Wulliman and/or Madeleine Jevons and/or Sola Hughes), viola (Phoebe Green), cello (Freya Schack-Arnott or Jack Ward), and contrabass (Rohan Dasika or Kathryn Schulmeister). I know: even allowing for them all to be taking part, that still doesn’t add up to 28, but what can you do? Others participating elsewhere in the program are recorder(s) Ryan Williams, saxophone Joshua Hyde, and uilleann pipes Matthew Horsley. Clement Power conducts, where necessary. Entry is a flat $55 and the Transaction Fee charged for online or phone booking is $7. On current showing, you can risk turning up on the night, preferably with an annoying pocketful of coins. |
RACHMANINOFF WITH PIERS LANE AND KRISTIAN CHONG |
Melbourne Recital Centre and Kristian Chong |
Primrose Potter Salon, Melbourne Recital Centre |
It’s a short program with the Russian composer’s Symphonic Dances the main work. He wrote this version for two pianos at the same time (1940) as he worked on the orchestral score, the last major work he completed before his death in 1943. Its three movements are vivid in their orchestral format and the outer segments revel in emphatic rhythmic interplay. I’m not saying that Piers Lane and Kristian Chong are flamboyant performers, but you wouldn’t call them shrinking violets, either. Both have engaging personalities, well-suited to this happy score. As an introduction, they perform 6 Pieces in the form of Canons by Schumann (not Schubert, as stated in the Recital Centre bumpf), written in 1845 for a pedal piano but here presented in an arrangement for two pianos that Debussy engineered in 1891. Well, that’s going to prove a nice experience for everyone, if a bit recherche; it will give the performers a chance to brush up on their integration skills, I suppose, but you’d be hard pressed to find any common ground with the Dances. Standard entry costs $55, concession $45, students $20 and the transaction fee is an ungracious $7 if you book online or by phone. |
KEYS TO LIFE: JAYSON GILLHAM AND IYAD SUGHAYER |
Elisaberth Murdoch Hall, Melbourne Recital Centre |
Here comes another two-piano recital following straight on from the Lane/Chong one yesterday. Featuring Queensland’s own Jayson Gillham and Jordanian-Palestinian Iyad Sughayer, this evening’s program involves works which were pretty much all composed (or personally authorized) for the two-piano combination, although not the players’ opener: Debussy’s limpid four-movement Petite Suite, written between 1886 to 1889, has both performers seated at the one keyboard. One of the pinnacles of the repertoire arrives with Mozart’s Sonata in D K. 448, one of those masterful works that brim with affability and contentment. The 1905 Introduction and Allegro by Ravel has always existed for me as a harp, flute, clarinet and string quartet construct but the composer himself put together a two-piano version which Durand published in 1906. In 1944, Khachaturian produced his Three Pieces for Two Pianos (Ostinato, Romance, Valse fantastique) which are new to me but painless, this compendium lasting about ten minutes only. Arensky wrote four suites for two pianos and we hear his first, the Suite Op. 15 which also has three movements (Romance, Valse, Polonaise) of which I know only the gentle middle one. The pianists end with Chabrier’s Espana, the work which brought the compooser fame in 1883; again, I was surprised to find that Chabrier himself set up a two-piano version in 1884. As well, there’s a contemporary voice heard along this recital’s path: senior Lebanese composer Houtaf Khoury‘s new work, here enjoying a world premiere. Your normal adult tickets sit between $79 and $119, concession holders paying $20 to $15 less in the two top brackets of three; Under 28s pay $99 for good seats, $54 for not-so-good; Under 16s cough up $54 anywhere in the hall. The Recital Centre’s Transaction Fee of between $4 and $8.50 obtains if you order online or by phone. While the Murdoch space’s circle and wings aren’t available, the stalls still have about 180 seats available. It’s tempting to try fronting up on the night to avoid any financial brutalization. |
FROM ROMANCE TO RECKONING |
Primrose Potter Salon, Melbourne Recital Centre |
Wednesday July 22 at 2 pm |
The romance bit is easy. Kathryn Selby and her Selby & Friends colleagues for this tour, Melbourne Symphony Orchestra concertmaster Natalie Chee and University of Melbourne Conservatorium of Music’s Head of Cello Richard Narroway, are playing a double dose of Schumann and the big Mendelssohn Piano Trio No. 2: two of the fundamental names from the Romantic era in European musical history. The reckoning is a more local affair and involves a plethora of local composers, all women. This hybrid is called Fire Dances Suite and it dates from 2020. Unlike Stravinsky’s happy ballet, this commemorates the spate of bushfires that have swept across the nation in recent (?) years to deadly and devastating effect, each of the writers taking a particular aspect of these scourges, from initial smoke to evaluations after the disaster has passed. The voices involved are Nat Bartsch, Olivia Bettina Davies, Natalie Williams, Maria Grenfell, Hilary Kleinig, Elena Kats-Chernin, Cathy Applegate and Isabella Gerometta. The only complete performance I can find comes in at 17 minutes, so the movements are all brief. Our two Schumanns are, first, the Three Romances of 1849 which the composer expressly forbade his publishers from arranging for anything else, insisting on the original’s oboe and piano format, but here we are with a cello/piano version; and then the A minor Violin Sonata of 1851 which didn’t please the composer but which has found plenty of favour since, if only for its highly appealing middle Allegretto. As for the Mendelssohn in C minor of 1845, this work has enjoyed expoosures aplenty, thanks to Melbourne’s chamber music competitions where the temptation to power through its rhetoric is irresistible to many a young ensemble, all of them delighting in the Old Hundredth peroration that crowns the score. Standard entry costs $89, concession $69, Seniors $69, children under 12 free. You also have the Recital Centre’s fee-gouge of between $4 and $8.50 if booking online or by phone – hard to avoid when the event is in the Salon which holds only 140. |
This program will be repeated at 7 pm. |
Melbourne Symphony Orchestra |
Primrose Potter Salon, Melbourne Recital Centre |
Saturday July 25 at 4:30 pm |
This small-scale recital begins with American writer Bryce Dessner‘s Murder Ballades of 2013, famous for its initial performances by the ensemble eighth blackbird. This work takes its fons et origo from American folk music, albeit melodies and lyrics with a particular theme, and it calls for flute/alto flute, clarinet/bass clarinet, percussion, piano, violin and cello, lasts about 20 minutes and can be played by a very versatile two instrumentalists or (more commonly, you’d think) five or six. For this reading, I’m guessing the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra members participating will be flute Wendy Clarke, clarinet David Thomas, percussion John Arcaro, piano Louisa Breen, violin Tiffany Cheng (this program’s curator) or Anna Skalova, and cello Caleb Wong. The MSO’s composer in residence, Joe Chindamo, presents his String Quartet No.1, Tempesta, a four-movement (Tempesta, Lament/Seduction, Frenzy, Flight) score from 2014. This will involve, Cheng, Skalova, viola Jenny Khafagi, and Wong. A further blast from America comes in Copland’s 1937 Sextet for Clarinet, String Quartet and Piano, arranged from his Short Symphony of 1932-3 which was thought to be too difficult to play. This will be followed by Holly Harrison‘s celebration of (part of) Lewis Carroll’s masterpiece, The Mad-Hatter’s Tea Party written in 2018 which will involve Clarke, Thomas, Cheng or Skalova, Wong and Arcaro with a narrator/reciter in the shape of Nick Kuiper. Probably because of this last piece, the performance will be a ‘relaxed’ one, so your usual all-quiet rules won’t necessarily apply. Standard and concession tickets cost $35, children get in for $15. Also, the MSO’s $7 Transaction Fee applies if you book online or by phone. The event isn’t sold out – yet (June 8). |
This program will be repeated on Sunday July 26 at 11 am. This is not relaxed but also not necessarily tense; still, ticket prices are more expensive. |
Australian Haydn Ensemble |
Primrose Potter Salon, Melbourne Recital Centre |
Wednesday July 29 at 7 pm |
I might have encountered Sydney’s Australian Haydn Ensemble during our COVID years when we all depended on the Australian Digital Concert Hall to hear anything in live performance. If so, nothing remains in the memory. Which is not to say that their first Melbourne performance tonight might not be worthwhile. The ensemble is, in fact, operating as a string quartet: violins Skye McIntosh and Matthew Greco, viola Rafael Font, cello Daniel Yeadon. They are proposing a diet of ‘Bohemian’ music which begins with the Austrian Haydn’s Op. 77 No. 1, his second-last in the form written in 1799. To end, we hear from the German-born Beethoven through his Op. 18 No. 3 in D of 1798-1800. In between come a single movement, Larghetto, from a real Bohemian (well, he was called ‘Il Boemo’ in Italy) Myslivecek’s Op. 3 No. 6 (presumably, the one in C Major); the complete Op. 5 No. 5b in G minor by Richter who was born in Moravia and so sort-of qualifies as a Bohemian, here producing a taut four-movement construct that concludes with a minuet and trio; and another Moravian, Paul Wranitzky’s Op. 49 in D minor which could well have been his last in the form. Any of them divine? You be the judge. Entry costs $60, concession $45, Senior $55, plus the anywhere-between-$4-and-$8.50 Transaction Fee that the Recital Centre slugs every patron with when you order online or by phone. At time of writing (June 8), there is still ‘moderate availability’. |
Melbourne Symphony Orchestra |
Hamer Hall, Arts Centre Melbourne |
Thursday July 30 at 7:30 pm |
The draw-card for this concert is Melbourne-born soprano Danielle de Niese who we hope will be generating much-needed warmth on this cold night with several as-yet unspecified selections from musicals by Bernstein, Gershwin, ‘and more’. You’re spoiled for choice with Gershwin whose melodic facility is, in this sphere, beyond compare. As for Bernstein, you’ve got On the Town, West Side Story and about six other musicals that nobody knows much about in this country. Searching for de Niese’s experience with either composer, I can’t find any trace; still, perhaps she’ll be more familiar than we are with the ‘and more’ component. The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra‘s chief conductor Jaime Martin directs the soprano and also takes his instrumentalists through the nine-part Symphonic Dances from West Side Story, arranged in 1960 by Bernstein and orchestrators Sid Ramin and Irwin Kostal. Of more interest (well, to me) is a long-time favourite: Ginastera’s Variaciones concertantes of 1953 which I once had on an exceptionally lucid LP from Dorati and the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra. This work still strikes me as a more colourful, less studied showpiece than Britten’s Guide, especially for its finale: a brilliant malambo in 3/4+6/8 brimming with rhythmic energy and a spiky sequence of timbres that encapsulate the appeal of Latin American classical music. For a standard seat, you’ll pay between $81 and $139; concessions are a munificent $5 cheaper. The MSO applies its $7 Transaction Fee if you incommode its money-counters by ordering online or by phone. Currently, the balcony is not being used and the booking site claims that there are 100+ seats still available in the stalls and the circle-and-choir respectively. |
This program will be repeated on Saturday August 1 at 2 pm. |
|
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment