The one orchestral concert in the
Bridgewater Hall’s ‘Waters of Life’ mini-festival was by the 12-strong English
String Orchestra, and though its title was ‘Wall of Water’, the connections
between all the items on the programme and the theme of water were, well, a bit
fluid.
It was conducted by Kenneth Woods, who,
with violin soloist in two of the pieces Harriet Mackenzie, and the composers
of two of them, Deborah Pritchard and Emily Doolittle, introduced the music in
a half-hour seminar before they played it.
The real common factors then began to be
clearer: all the music was by women composers, and all of it was written in the
21st century (and of course all was either written for, or playable
by, an ensemble of 12 strings). Congratulations to the Bridgewater Hall for
having the courage to put on such a programme as the major evening event of a
self-promoted series: it didn’t pull an enormous crowd, but similar enterprise
anywhere else might have pulled no audience at all.
First was Thea Musgrave’s Green, written in 2006 specifically for
12 strings of the Scottish Ensemble. It pits a melodic, harmonious sound
against a discordant one that starts in the bass and gradually drowns the
former – except for a soft high note on solo violin which just survives at the
end. A metaphor for humankind’s environmental despoliation, perhaps?
It was quite hard going for this listener,
as it takes some time to make its point, but that could never be said about the
violin concerto, Wall of Water, by
Deborah Pritchard (premiered only three years ago, by this orchestra and this
conductor, who commissioned it). It was accompanied by projections of the
paintings series of the same title by Maggi Hambling. Pritchard can take her
musical responses directly from colour awareness, and these pictures for her embody
‘warm’ and ‘cold’ colours, and a mix of the two. I think it would probably work
well without the projections, too, as it’s got a clear structure built on a
soft, rumbling pedal effect which recurs twice and the solo violin’s cadenza-style
introduction, which itself returns. The transformation and revisiting of the material
makes real musical sense, and the solo was beautifully played by Harriet
Mackenzie.
Emily Doolittle’s falling still is ostensibly about the natural world – with a
varying solo violin song and a chord progression in the accompanying strings
which is almost mechanistically prescribed. Actually the high-pitched notes of
these chords seemed like an ethereal cobweb of sound to me – mysterious and subtle.
The ensemble finished with Kaija Saariaho’s
Terra memoria, a version of the
composer’s work for string quartet, and dedicated to ‘those departed’. It runs
a considerable gamut of emotive tones – the ‘harmonic trills’ (alternation of
fully stopped notes and harmonics) sounding like ghostly wailings, the more
vigorous music like cries of protest, and the unisons like desperate clinging
to the known world. It all ends very softly with a descending ostinato and
whispered alternation of major and minor intervals … a resolution of sorts.
Since we so rarely hear a bill of concert
music such as this in our major hall, the opportunity was one Manchester should
be grateful for.
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