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SEEN AND HEARD FESTIVAL PREVIEW
Cheltenham Music Festival 2008:
A Preview by John Quinn (JQ)
The sixty-fourth Cheltenham Music Festival runs from 4 to 19 July.
This is Meurig Bowen’s first festival as Director, taking over from
Martyn Brabbins. Given the long lead time that’s often necessary to
book artists and the fact that Mr Brabbins seemed to step down as
Director somewhat suddenly last year I’m not sure how much of the
2008 programme was inherited by Mr Bowen. What did surprise me a
little was that he doesn’t really use his foreword to the programme
to advance any real theme for the current festival or to set out his
vision for the future.
When one gets into the prospectus itself one finds that there are
several themes running through the festival though none of these are
as prominent a thread as was the theme of American music that ran
through the 2007 programme. I suspect this is a sign that Mr Bowen
may not have had as much time as he might have wished to devise the
whole programme. The strands within the overall programme include a
welcome focus on Ralph Vaughan Williams in the fiftieth anniversary
year of his death. It’s a logical step from RVW to celebrate more
generally “the Folk Revivalists”. The programme also features a good
helping of chamber music by Schubert and another theme is “The
Manchester Sound”. This latter includes a number of works by Sir
Peter Maxwell Davies, the featured composer of the 2008 Festival,
who is an alumnus of the Royal Northern College of Music.
The Manchester connection is to the fore right at the start with a
pair of concerts by the BBC Philharmonic. They’ll be led by the
Polish conductor, Michal Dvorzynski, whose name is new to me, in an
English programme (4 July), that includes The Planets
by Holst and the first of two chances to hear Vaughan Williams’s
evocative The Lark Ascending (the other is on 19 July).
Britten and Grainger supply the rest of the music in that programme.
The following night there’s Grieg’s Piano Concerto and Lutoslawski’s
Concerto for Orchestra, coupled with music by Smetana and Kodály.
Another orchestral highlight will be Richard Hickox’s concert with
the Philharmonia in the glorious setting of Tewkesbury Abbey (11
July). There’s more Vaughan Williams in the shape of one of his less
frequently played symphonies, the Sinfonia Antartica.
Bruch’s evergreen Violin Concerto No 1 and Ravel’s Le Tombeau de
Couperin complete an enticing programme. The following night
more visitors from the North West, in the shape of the Manchester
Camerata, bring a fascinating programme of music entitled Strings
Fantasia. RVW’s great ‘Tallis’ Fantasia is on the bill
together with offerings from Rautavaara, Bartok and by a Bartok
pupil, Sandor Veress. The orchestra will be directed by the leader
of the LSO, Gordan Nikolitch.
The music by Maxwell Davies will be of great interest to devotees of
his work, not least because there will be two important new chamber
pieces. On 8 July the violinist Ilya Gringolts and pianist
Aleksandar Madžar will play his new Sonata, just days after giving
the world première at the St. Magnus Festival in Orkney. Cheltenham
gets its own ‘Max’ world première just a few days later when the
Primrose Piano Quartet unveils his new Piano Quartet in an eclectic
programme that also includes music by Dohnányi, Brahms and Roger
Quilter – his Gipsy Life Fantasy Quintet, a piece of which I
must confess I’ve never heard.
Other works by Maxwell Davies include his celebrated and
iconoclastic Eight Songs for a Mad King, which will be
a BBC Radio 3 Discovering Music presentation (9 July). Wells
Cathedral School Chamber Choir will sing two of his short choral
works in their recital (8 July) and his Seven In Nomines can
be heard in a Festival Academy Players concert on 19 July. This
latter event also includes the first performances of new works by
two past Festival Directors, John Manduell and Michael Berkeley.
Another notable première will be Air with Variations by
Mark-Anthony Turnage, which Craig Ogden will include in his guitar
recital on 12 July. Ogden will also offer The Blue Guitar by
Tippett and music by Bach. He’ll also play a piece by Piazzolla,
which should please those who don’t share my feeling that this
Argentinean composer’s music has become far more exposed than it
merits.
There’s a good helping of vocal music. The marvellous mezzo-soprano
Sarah Connolly makes a welcome return to sing Vivaldi and Handel
accompanied by the ensemble La Serenissima (13 July). Another
admirable British singer, the tenor James Gilchrist, teams up with
The Schubert Ensemble to perform Vaughan Williams’s On Wenlock
Edge as well as songs by Gurney and Grainger (8 July). And
there’s more English song in a recital by baritone Matthew Rose (6
July). He’s joined by pianist Gareth Hancock in more Grainger and
RVW (Songs of Travel) as well as a selection of Britten
folksong arrangements and Butterworth’s A Shropshire Lad.
For all this, the highlight for lovers of art songs, especially
lieder, will surely be the recitals on consecutive days that
contain the three great cycles by Schubert. First up is Die
Schöne Müllerin in which tenor Allan Clayton is partnered by
Paul Lewis, no less (17 July). Lewis also will play the Schubert
Sonata in G major, D 894. The next evening bass-baritone Florian
Boesch and Roger Vignoles will perform Schwanengesang and
other songs. Finally on 19 July, in a morning recital, Mark Padmore
(tenor) and Paul Lewis will be our guides to Winterreise. All
these recitals will be in the ideal surroundings of Pittville Pump
Room.
A couple of outstanding choral events must be mentioned. Paul
Hillier brings his Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir to Tewkesbury
Abbey, which should be the perfect place to hear their programme of
medieval music and pieces by Arvo Pärt (10 July). They transfer to
Pittville Pump Room the next morning to give a recital of pieces
inspired by Estonian folksong. There will be more Pärt on the
programme and also pieces by Sibelius, Veljo Tormis and others.
Another mouth-watering programme (7 July) includes music by Olivier
Messiaen and I’ll come to it in a second. I’m a little disappointed
that I can spot only two works by the French master in the
programme, given that it’s his centenary year. However, what’s on
offer makes up in terms of quality for any lack of quantity. I shall
certainly want to stay on in the Pittville Pump room after
Schwanengesang for a candlelit performance of Messiaen’s searing
and beautiful Quartet for the End of Time by four members of
the Festival Academy (18 July, at 22.30)
But let me end with my own “must hear” programme, the concert on 7
July. This is another event in Tewkesbury Abbey and it will feature
two crack local chamber choirs, the St. Cecilia Singers and the
Oriel Singers. They’ll perform music by Tallis, including Spem in
Alium, Messiaen and the Four Latin Motets by Duruflé and
Abbey Organist, Carleton Etherington will play organ music by
Messiaen. Then, to conclude Timothy Reynish will direct the Royal
Northern College of Music Wind Orchestra in Messiaen’s monumental
Et Expecto Resurrectionem Mortuorum. Unmissable!
With some eighty-three events going on it’s impossible, in a short
preview such as this, to do more than scratch the surface of the
festival programme. I’m conscious that I’ve left out several major
events, including a piano recital by Marc-André Hamelin. I can only
advise music lovers to browse at their leisure through either the
website or the brochure – though I find the layout of the brochure
very unclear and I hope a better design will be reintroduced next
year - and pick out your own delights. 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
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