* Hungarian Dances yesterday at the St James Theatre Studio was a fabulous experience. A treat, a privilege and a joy to perform with amazing musicians in such a great venue. Huge thanks to everyone concerned! More Hungarian Dances later in the year at the Musical Museum, near Kew Bridge, on Sunday afternoon 8 September and Pen Fro Literary Festival, Pembrokeshire, on 12 September. Watch this space for further dates...
* Please read this eloquent piece by Tasmin Little in the Telegraph re sexism in the classical music. She tells it like it is.
* If you're near a big screen tomorrow, go and see the FREE, live, open-air relay of Mayerling from Covent Garden. It is top ballerina Mara Galeazzi's farewell performance with the Royal Ballet and features Edward Watson as Prince Rudolf. I went to see them both in action in the ROH a couple of weeks ago and emerged utterly wrung out by the combination of intense emotion and astonishing dancing. Is Mayerling the greatest ballet drama ever created? Personally, I think it might be. Don't miss it. Take a brolly if you must, but just don't miss it.
* Please support the ISM's campaign to secure funding for music education beyond 2015. There's a petition to sign, here.
Every little helps, or we hope it does.
* Here's a discussion from Voice of Russia radio that I did last week with Alice Lagnado and John Riley about the lasting importance of The Rite of Spring. The writes, the rights, and sometimes the wrongs too. http://ruvr.co.uk/radio_broadcast/77030634/115272201.html
* And here's a Friday Historical in advance, because I will be otherwise occupied this week: Fritz Kreisler and his cellist brother, Hugo, with pianist Charlton Heath, playing one of my favourite pieces from the Hungarian Dances concert: Kreisler's Marche miniature viennoise. (Did you know Kreisler had a cellist brother? Neither did I. They're a gorgeous team.)
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Hungarian Dances in Lakes and London
A final reminder that tonight is your chance to catch HUNGARIAN DANCES: THE CONCERT OF THE NOVEL at the St James Theatre Studio, 12 Palace Street, London SW1, at 8pm.
AND AN UPDATE: the thrill of the adrenaline rush...is this maybe why performers get hooked on performing? My piece for Culturekicks: http://www.culturekicks.co.uk/2013/06/04/in-praise-of-the-adrenaline-rush/
We are just back from the Ulverston International Music Festival in the South Lakeland, where we, um, we got a standing ovation...! Which was rather gratifying to say the least, especially as this was a morning coffee concert and by then it was coming up to lunchtime. Huge thanks to everyone at the festival for a day to remember. Above: Anthony Hewitt (who's artistic director of the festival), David Le Page and me, milking our moment of glory in the Coronation Hall...
I also did a pre-concert talk with everybody's favourite cellist on Thursday night... He and pianist Ian Brown gave a sensational recital featuring, not least, the cello sonata by Frank Bridge, which is a work everybody ought to hear and marvel at, especially when it's played with such eloquence. An English Rachmaninov? Not far off.
Ulverston was the birthplace of Stan Laurel, so look who's lurking just by the Coronation Hall doorway. Oddly enough, I nearly had the opportunity to say "Here's another fine mess you've got me into..." due to a strange incident at 1am the night before our concert... Suffice it to say that Gretel and I were in a huge flap, Tony's dad heroically ventured forth to save the day, and Dave slept through the whole thing.
See you tonight!
Friday, June 07, 2013
The New Creativity - a guest post from James Inverne
I'm away at the Ulverston International Music Festival in the Lake District, doing some nice concerts. More of this soon. Meanwhile, delighted to offer this guest-post from my colleague James Inverne, formerly editor of GRAMOPHONE, about his new Lorca Songs show, which is at St John's Smith Square next Tuesday (and unfortunately clashes with my Hungarian Dances concert at the St James Theatre Studio!) JD
Editor-turned-manager’s
new show? The new creativity
James Inverne on
jumping across to the other side of the footlights, and writing a show
What exactly is creativity? I remember a rather wonderful
anecdote, somewhere in Stephen Glover’s compendium of essays about journalism,
“Secrets of the Press” about a newspaper owner who, wandering through his own
newsroom, complained to his editor about so many people “doing nothing but
staring out of the window”. That, it seems to me, starts to define creativity
pretty well – the art of productive window-staring. If you’re faced with a
brief, or a challenge, or a job, and you can find a way to expand its
possibilities by engaging imagination, context, presentation than you will be
dubbed creative.
A few years ago this did not necessarily feel like a great
thing to be. At least, as the recession bit and reality hit, the focus of
everything seemed to be on number-crunching and belt-tightening. On the web,
for instance, it was all about lists, about things that would come high in SEO
(search engine optimisation) and those things remain important. But there’s
something else in the air, a renewed sense of the importance of creativity. At
times of crisis finding “creative solutions” is a phrase one hears a lot, and
it usually means cutting budgets. But after that comes real creativity – a
sense that we should see what we can make with what we have, of relying once
again on our imaginations to make life interesting (and by extension to make
things that other people might want to take notice of).
I noticed this a great deal at the big classical music
conference in Vienna last week, Classical NEXT. Suddenly record labels weren’t
talking (only) about sales figures, they wanted to find creative and
distinctive ways to build their presence on the web, or live events that truly
reflected what their artists were about. And that, as a fully paid-up creative
person, fills me with joy. Because when I left the editorship of Gramophone I wanted to see how far I
could push this idea of creativity. I felt sure that there must be a place for
it in the traditionally hectic, overtly administrative world of artist
management. I felt there must be a way to work with artists one admired in a
way that would get across an idea of their artistic identities, their places in
the world.
Sometimes that means working closely with conductors and
record labels on repertoire and so forth. But occasionally it has allowed me to
create exciting new projects and the first of these to come to fruition –
called Lorca’s Songs gets its
premiere at St John’s, Smith Square this Tuesday, June 11th (gulp). The
original idea was to create a part-concert, part-spoken word evening telling
the fused history of Spanish music and Spanish poetry – I created it for the
violinist Alexandre Da Costa, who has a deeply authentic and idiomatic view of
Spanish music (he looks for its darkness and intensity, which he says is the
true heart of Spanish culture, as witness his recent, unusually trenchant
recording of Lalo’s Symphonie Espagnole
on Warner Classics).
But then something happened. I started putting it together
and the writer in me took over. Suddenly I was creating characters, almost a
plot. I became fixated by the Spanish notion of the duende, the sense that art can be so intense that one can sense
death. It became a show that lived, it breathes and suddenly what had seemed
creative in the idea became an act of creation. For perhaps the first time, I
felt something of what (here comes a colossal name-drop, sorry) Johnny Depp
once said to me about working with Terry Gilliam – “We turn up in the morning
and it’s like you have the skeleton there and you throw bits of meat on it and
see what monster comes to life”. Excited, I brought in the great actor Henry
Goodman (pictured above) and the leading Spanish guitarist Rafael Aguirre, and we had our show –
for violin, guitar and actor.
Writing articles, including reviews, has always felt to me
like carving a statue – you have your material, your block of marble, and in
fashioning a readable piece from it, well, it feels much like sculpting. Books
are a bit different. But a play – to be honest I don’t even know that I would
call this a play, and most of the words in it are by Lorca and the rest, but it
is drama, I know that much. Maybe it’s even a monster, of a kind. Certainly you
can’t fully engage with the dark genius of Lorca or the intensity of De Falla
without facing them head-on. As the narrator says in the show, “If we are to
experience, let us experience…” I did
when I wrote the thing. And maybe to be truly creative you must be unflinching.
And guess what – I think it’s a better show this way, and something people will
want to see. And that’s not only creativity, not only good business sense, it’s
artistically honest. All of which feels rather good.
“Lorca’s Songs” is at
St John’s, Smith Square in London on Tuesday 11th June at 7.30pm.
For tickets call 020 7222 1061 or visit www.ssjs.org.uk
Tuesday, June 04, 2013
Say it with music
A friend from the London Gay Men's Chorus sent me some links and a few words about their protest yesterday in support of gay marriage. They were right outside the House of Lords.
Solidarity to our friends and colleagues! And these guys put on a show like no other.
"It was a great day! Apparently our singing could be heard inside the chamber where the Lords were debating the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill. We made it on to the BBC News at 10pm. Several speakers commented on ours being the best demonstration they had witnessed outside the Houses of Parliament. In the morning we were outnumbered by a vocal and angry Christian group, but they left in the early afternoon leaving the space for us, supported by Stonewall, Peter Tatchell’s group etc. I hope we made a difference. The speakers thought we did."More here: http://www.gaystarnews.com/article/gay-chorus-leads-carnival-equal-marriage-outside-lords030613
Solidarity to our friends and colleagues! And these guys put on a show like no other.
Monday, June 03, 2013
JD & Friends on R3
Listen out for our broadcast today on BBC Radio 3's In Tune! David Le Page, Viv McLean and I will be performing some extracts from our 'Hungarian Dances' concert ahead of Ulverston on Saturday, the St James Theatre Studio next Tuesday and the Musical Museum, Kew Bridge, on 8 September (and more later). http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b020vjxx
PLEASE COME TO THE CONCERTS!
St James Theatre Studio, 11 June, 8pm
Ulverston, 8 June, 11am (yes, a sort of palindrome on 11 and 8...)
And if you missed the Composer of the Week on Faure last week, it's on iPlayer all of this week to podcast: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00sv826
You wouldn't believe how much organising is involved in even a single concert... Normal JDCMB service will be resumed as soon as possible.
PLEASE COME TO THE CONCERTS!
St James Theatre Studio, 11 June, 8pm
Ulverston, 8 June, 11am (yes, a sort of palindrome on 11 and 8...)
And if you missed the Composer of the Week on Faure last week, it's on iPlayer all of this week to podcast: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00sv826
You wouldn't believe how much organising is involved in even a single concert... Normal JDCMB service will be resumed as soon as possible.
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