Kate Plane's Blog

Life as a freelance musician laid bare…

Posts Tagged ‘Berlioz’

Culture Vulture

Posted by kateplane on September 23, 2010

I have really been enjoying myself lately, and have seen a rather wide variety of live performances (aside from the ones I’ve been playing in).  In the last few of weeks I have been to see:

The Monteverdi Vespers concert was wonderful – I went with my mum, who had heard it performed once before in Westminster Cathedral.  I myself had never heard it performed live, and King’s Place is such a wonderful venue for a work like that because it’s so intimate.  Both the choir and the orchestra were superb. Being a trumpet player I was naturally impressed by the stunning cornet playing, but I’d never heard the OAE perform before and the sound created with the period instruments and voices in plainsong was truly divine.  The concert was recorded and I’m very much looking forward to hearing the recording when it is available.

The Lying Down Concert was an interesting concept.  It was the London Premier of Earthrise composed by Alec Roth as a commission for Ex Cathedra to celebrate their 40th year.  This coincided with the 40th anniversary of the Moon landing, and of the famous picture of the Earth rising above the surface of the Moon.  Roth writes “the music of Earthrise is a meditation on this icon and falls into three sections:
Part I – Man’s constant drive for exploration and exploitation
Part II – A contemplation of the Earth seen from space
Part III – a plea for true wisdom and understanding
The text is set in the Latin of the Vulgate, and the whole is topped and tailed by two of the Great Advent Antiphons.”
Well, I’m not too sure about the deeper meanings of some of that, but I can assure you that the concert was a unique experience for me.  Never have I been to a concert (in the Royal Opera House no less) and been invited to lie down on the floor, beneath a Floating Forest, and listen to a mixture of traditional and contemporary Japanese music (Takemitsu) alongside Messiaen, Tallis and the new Roth piece, all whilst watching the light show dance on the ‘trees’ and whilst an aerialist spins above me.  I came out of the concert feeling as though I had meditated for just over an hour – what a wonderful way to enjoy some very earthly music.

Next up was a new play, Bedlam, at The Globe.  I’d never been to The Globe before and that in itself is an experience – a rebuild of Shakespeare’s Globe which transports us back to Elizabethan London, and that includes paying extra to sit down and even more for a cushion!  But back to Bedlam, an extravaganza that is set in a fictionalised version of Bethlem Hospital, London’s infamous insane asylum, in the middle of the 18th century.  This is the first play ever written by a woman to be staged at The Globe so it was good to see history in the making, and although there were mixed reviews from the press, I thoroughly enjoyed the play and the whole Globe experience (including my friend Jim being dragged up on stage as part of the audience participation and the free bar afterwards, since we went on press night and Jessica Swale, the director, is a friend of mine).


The trip to Poland was exciting for me as I’d never visited the country before and didn’t really know what to expect.  I found out that the people are very friendly, everything is pretty cheap, and since the weather was nice I spent 4 days wandering around Wroclaw thoroughly enjoying myself.  The language is hard though – I learnt how to thank people in Polish and that was about it unfortunately, but I did see the hotel that Hitler used to stay in – pointed out to me by a taxi driver to which I replied “oh, wow, that’s…very interesting” as I wasn’t really sure how else to respond.  I was actually in Poland to tag along with my boyfriend Sam, who was performing and recording the gargantuan Berlioz work ‘Grand Messe des Morts’ in the Mary Magdalene Church in Wroclaw.  This huge piece of music required a choir of 200-odd singers, a full orchestra, with an additional 4 ‘brass bands’ and drums stationed in the corners of the stage and adjacent alcoves – 400 performers in total, including:

I sat in the church for some of the rehearsals and recording, but hearing the piece performed in full during the concert, with the sun setting through the huge window behind the stage, was incredible – the wall of sound that hit you when the full ensemble was performing was contrasted perfectly with the sections of quiet a cappella singing by the semi-chorus; a truly beautiful sound.  I was so pleased I was able to see this concert – I knew quite a few of the guys that had been booked in the brass section and it was great to hear such an epic piece with those big brass moments, but the rest of the orchestra and the choir were wonderful too, and this work is performed so rarely because of the sheer scale of it and the amount of personnel needed to do it justice.  I just hope I get booked to play it one day!

Posted in Choirs, Concerts, Orchestras, Recording, Social, Theatre | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

The Month o’ May – Part 1

Posted by kateplane on June 9, 2009

May was a busy month.  I’m not complaining at all, but it was a very busy month.  It began on May 1st (the being busy part, not the month which of course started on May 1st!), with a daytime rehearsal with the Canterbury Philharmonic Orchestra in Bethnal Green for a couple of performances of Verdi’s requiem, and an evening gig with a function band down at The Grand in Brighton.

I enjoy the Canterbury Philharmonic Orchestra/Canterbury Choral Society concerts for a number of reasons.  Firstly, they are a good orchestra and a good choir. The orchestra seems to be largely sourced from the London music college graduates, so it’s always a chance to meet up with my former Royal Academy of Music (RAM) peers, some of whom I don’t get to see very often (others I see very frequently!).  Secondly, they pick good repertoire; Verdi’s Requiem is a great piece both to listen to and to perform (I’ve also performed Belioz “Damnation de Faust” with them in the past).  Thirdly, they perform in good venues.  The rehearsal on 1st May was for two performances of the Verdi; the first of which was in Snape Maltings on Sunday 3rd May and the second of which will be in Canterbury Cathedral on Saturday 20th June.  Although Snape Maltings is MILES away from Windsor (a 264-mile round trip), the concert hall there is excellent (http://www.aldeburgh.co.uk/).   And although the accoustics in Canterbury Cathedral (the location for the June concert and the previous Berlioz one) are not the best for hearing vocal performances, it is still a wonderful venue in which to play.  The problem with me taking on the gig at Snape Maltings in May was that it fell on the same date as my boyfriend’s birthday, which as you can imagine, didn’t go down particularly well as I was out all day and most of the night.  But because that gig was tied to the one in June and I couldn’t afford to say no to them both, I had to take it and sacrifice spending the day with my other half.  To be fair to him he didn’t kick up a fuss about it, although he was obviously disappointed.  But it’s one of those decisions you will face as a musician, and if I worked a normal 9-5 job he wouldn’t have expected me to take the day off if his birthday happened to fall mid-week (unlike this year’s birthday which fell on a Sunday unfortunately).  However, we did manage to celebrate his birthday that weekend – I packed alot in!  After getting home somewhere around 4am on Saturday morning after the Friday night gig in Brighton, we had a fun trip to the Zoo on Saturday and had a lovely dinner at a Thai restaurant in Windsor that evening.  After he opened presents and cards on the Sunday morning (his birthday) I faced the long drive to Snape while he had a long lunch with his parents.  The concert went really well and I eventually met up with him at a bar in South London where he was out with some friends who were also wishing farewell to a friend of ours who has gone to Ibiza to DJ for the summer season.  All in all, it was a busy weekend – thank goodness it was a bank holiday Monday!

My final thought about the Canterbury Phil/Choral Soc gig was this… There are four on-stage trumpet parts and four off-stage trumpet parts (I was onstage, playing 4th trumpet and tonking out the bottom end of the section – fab!).  All four on-stage trumpets were female, and one of the off-stage trumpets was also female.  Now, obviously it’s no shock to me to see talented women playing the trumpet, but it’s rare that in an 8-piece trumpet section the majority of those players would be female.  Very enjoyable indeed!

Canterbury Choral Society – link for the June concert:

http://www.mdesignsolutions.co.uk/cgi-bin/ccs/info_concerts.html?domain=info/concerts&name=nxtconcert

Posted in Gigs, Orchestras | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
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