THINGS may have quietened down after Manchester’s
International Festival, but in Buxton they’re still going strong.
The festival there has more than a week
still to run, with opera performances every day and a kaleidoscope of classical
attractions as well.
One of those has a distinct Manchester branding – the Hallé Soloists (July 20,
St John’s
church, Buxton, 12 noon). Formed and led by Hallé Orchestra leader Lyn Fletcher, it’s made
up of principal players from the orchestra, and is to perform one of the great
creations to come out of the Second World War – Olivier Messiaen’s Quartet For
The End Of Time.
The
piece was composed (mainly) while Messiaen was a prisoner of war in Stalag
VIII-A and written for piano (which he played himself), clarinet violin and
cello, professional players of which were in the camp at the same time. Its
premiere was to an audience of prisoners and guards, and Messiaen said
afterwards: “Never was I
listened to with such rapt attention and comprehension.”
Among other
performers in the week are soprano Rosalind Coad (July 20, St John’s church, 3pm), The English Concert directed by Robert
Howarth (July 21, St John’s church, 12 noon), the Elias String Quartet (July
21, St John’s church, 3.30pm), and Vivaldi specialists La Serenissima, who
include the version of The Four Seasons known as the Manchester Manuscript from
its preservation in the Henry Watson Music Library here (July 22, Buxton Opera
House, 7.30pm).
Soprano Gillian Keith, who’s been a
favourite of festival opera productions in recent years, appears with pianist
Simon Lepper and directed by Nina Brazier, in a special presentation she has
written herself, about Debussy And His Muse – the French singer Marie-Blanche
Vasnier: that’s on July 23, at the Pavilion Arts Centre, from 12 noon.
The Frith Piano Quartet are in the same
venue at 3.30pm.
Stephen Hough, the north west born and
Manchester trained piano virtuoso (also composer, writer, painter and more), who’s
been returning to our part of the country increasingly often, appears at the
Pavilion Arts Centre on July 24 (12 noon) in a programme of Schubert, Franck,
Debussy (Estampes) and Liszt – the 10th and 11th
Transcendental Studies.
And Manchester contemporary music
specialists Psappha are at St John’s church on July 25, with a programme
including John Adams (John’s Book Of Alleged Dances), Brahms (String Sextet no.
1) and Schoenberg’s Verklaerte Nacht.
No comments:
Post a Comment