Spooktacular Instrument Petting Zoo A Noisy and Joyful Triumph

Our pre- was a joyful and noisy success! Thanks to all the young spooks, skeletons and ghouls who came out to have a go a the assorted violins, trumpets, clarinets, shawms, banjos and more.

Many thanks to our partners at the Elgar School of Music andHerefordshire Music Service – run by Encore Enterprises CIC for their support providing instruments and tutors.

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Everyone who came was offered a voucher for a free lesson at the Elgar School, so we look forward to seeing our young guests soon to continue discovering the joys of playing an instrument.

Our heartfelt thanks to all the ESO musicians who threw themselves into the spirit of the event (and came up with some fantastic costumes!), the Music Theatre Company of the Elgar School of Music, and to our inspired host- Matthew Sharp, who gave us a tour de force of singing, acting, cello playing and improv.

This concert was presented in support of the ESO’s Concerts in Care Homes. You can learn more about this wonderful project here:
http://eso.co.uk/?page_id=21

Learn more about the ESO’s offerings for young people here:
http://eso.co.uk/?page_id=1300

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“[One] of the most exciting events I have experienced during a reviewing career approaching half a century” Birmingham Post on ESO Elgar Pilgrimage

An extraordinary rave review from senior critic Christopher Morley for Donald Fraser’s orchestration of the Elgar Piano Quintet as heard in the final concert of the 2015 Elgar Pilgrimage

Composer, producer, conductor and arranger, Donald Fraser
Composer, producer, conductor and arranger, Donald Fraser

“Two of the most exciting events I have experienced during a reviewing career approaching half a century involve symphonies Elgar never wrote….This “War Symphony” (the title taking its cue from an entry in Alice Elgar’s diary) is a triumph in its recreation of Elgar’s rich orchestral sound-world, and though Fraser, unlike Payne, had all the material in front of him, he had the difficult task of making us forget the original medium and accept the new one…Fraser’s assimilation of Elgar’s orchestral methods bears fascinating fruit and then some. His antiphonal use of brass, athletic horns in conversation with the heavier mob on the other side of the stage, is a highly effective resource; his deployment of percussion (quietly menacing timpani, skeletal tambourine) adds to the points being made, and the strings sing and cushion with gorgeous depths of tone….The ESO certainly played with an enthusiastic awareness that they were making history, and the devoted, unassuming Kenneth Woods conducted with an easy flexibility that recalled the work’s chamber-music origins. This “War Symphony” deserves to be acknowledged immediately as a worthy addition to the Elgar canon.”

Read the whole thing here

“Spellbinding Strings.” Hereford Times on ESO Elgar Pilgrimage at Hereford Cathedral

A rapturous reception from the critic of the Hereford Times for the ESO’s Elgar Pilgrimage appearance at Hereford Cathedral. Read the original here.

“Tonight we were simply spellbound, thanks largely to the meticulous attention to detail on the part of conductor Kenneth Woods….

April F

“There followed Songs of Loss and Regret by Philip Sawyers, who had introduced his work in a pre-concert talk earlier. Clearly a composer who eschews modernism, Sawyers presented us with a cycle of sombre, vaguely Mahlerian settings of poems, chiefly on the themes of war and death…

“Sawyers’ piece was beautifully written in the main, and sung with a blend of tragedy and rapture by the American soprano April Fredrick….

“To round off the evening, we were given a special treat: Elgar’s Sea Pictures arranged for Choir and Strings by Donald Fraser. For this, the ensemble was joined by the Academia Musica Choir, an enterprise that saw its beginnings at Hereford Sixth Form College…

“Normally scored for contralto solo, this moving version worked so convincingly that at times I was hard put to recall the original.

“This had been a carefully thought out programme, the concert itself once again proof that the city of Hereford is no backwater in the world of serious music.”

 

ESO Orchestra Courses 2015-16

Bringing music to life for young people
Bringing music to life for young people

Once again we are running a series of Beginners and Intermediate orchestra courses during half-terms of the school year. Download your application form here from the brochure orchestra course SINGLE PAGES – page 4

The courses will be lead by principal horn James Topp and all the other tutors are regulars in the orchestra

 

Review- ESO at St John’s Smith Square, Mozart Requiem: Origins

 

 

“…If ever an evening set the bar high this was it, but I can’t think of any evening that so comprehensively exceeded expectations.”

From the May edition of Kensington, Chelsea and Westminster Today

 

Mozart’s Requiem: Origins
English Symphony Orchestra
Academia Musica Choir
Kenneth Woods

St John’s Smith Square Friday 24 April 2015

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Requiem in D Minor (K626)

George Frideric Handel, Wilhelm Friedemann Bach

There was no K627

 The trouble with being more a heart-on-sleeve fan rather than cool and restrained ice-critic is that the last concert always does seem to have been the best. Thus it was on a warm spring April night, when I collected the new lawyer and headed for the venue that always delivers, St John Smith Square. I have a number of positive links with the second city, and am Villa fan to boot, so I looked forward to welcoming the English Symphony Orchestra and the Academia Musica Choir to a Westminster gig that used to be beyond our borders, but is now within – for that most sacred of all sacred music the never knowingly under-mythologised Requiem, Mozart speaking to us individually from his death bed, classical structures redacting voyeurism. If ever an evening set the bar high this was it, but I can’t think of any evening that so comprehensively exceeded expectations.

Chatting to Kenneth Woods in the afterglow of the perfect cultural event, edifying, educating, and at once thoroughly entertaining, in the perfectly intimate surroundings of SJSS, Kenneth put his agenda simply: “rebuilding a mass audience for great music will depend on strengthening the sense of community and fellowship around concerts. Pre-concert talks are a great way for the audience and me to get to know each other”.

The charismatic Woods gave a dramatic tour through the key influences of WF Bach and Handel, interacting deftly with the choir and orchestra, before moving seamlessly into Handel’s Funeral Anthem for Queen Caroline (The Ways of Zion do Mourn); high art (and plenty of it) presented with the ease and confidence of the true expert. However interesting and rewarding, these appetisers only served as heralds. Woods clearly knew exactly how to stage Mozart’s Requiem for maximum effect. I suspect if you’ve read this far you know it well but if you don’t, perhaps because sacred music doesn’t appeal, Mozart really does transcend genre. If you think because it’s a requiem it’s going to be too complex or just plain dark (and none of the movements have been made famous in adverts), remember that Mozart’s command of melody makes him perhaps the most accessible of all the really big-hitters.

The main controversy around the Requiem is to do with authorship. Elements of his pupil (and close friend) Süssmayr’s contributions (particularly Sanctus and Benedictus) have been subjected to quite unnecessarily harsh criticism. I actually find them appealingly innocent given that he was writing in the immediate aftermath of Mozart’s death. Some purists might think they’re a bit progressive rock, well maybe, but prog rock was rehabilitated years ago. Haydn’s famous quote “posterity will not see such a talent again in a hundred years “was uttered at the time of The Requiem’s premier. Kenneth Woods in his excellent exposition of the work and its influences establishes that authorship is interesting scholarship but a piece of music stands or falls on its own particularly if brand Mozart is throwing its weight about, and the work was substantially complete by the time of his death.

For the informed amateur the question of authenticity around The Requiem is a distraction that Kenneth Woods has (certainly for me) resolved with considerable finality:

“People have been arguing over [Süssmayr’s contribution when collating and completing Mozart’s work] for years, but I think it’s safe to say that the music is almost all Mozart, who wrote out the vocal parts and bass line from beginning to end for almost all of the piece. Süssmayr must have had sketches and detailed instructions from Mozart for the three movements that Mozart wasn’t able to write down. Süssmayr’s role was primarily that of an orchestrator/arranger. The two short “Osanna” fugues are probably the part of the piece where only Mozart’s theme survives. The idea is inspired, but they’re unimaginatively worked out by poor Süssmayr. At least they’re short.”

So there you are. An argument that has been raging for over 220 years can be parked. It’s pretty much all Mozart, except for the little bits that aren’t, and which are either charming anyway, or immaterial.

On the night, Woods ably supported by a splendid orchestra and choir featuring soprano Sofia Larsson, contralto Emma Curtis, tenor Matthew Minter, and bass Brian Bannatyne-Scott, and with apologies to a cast of about a hundred all of whom deserve a mention, produced a real tour-de-force. Nothing oozes a glamour more lustrous than The Requiem, not even reading Fitzgerald and drinking Vodka Martinis on a balmy Boxing Day in Cap Ferrat. A fabulous rendition of Mozart’s most famous piece, Woods argues perhaps his best. There was no K627.

© James Douglas

 

Mozart Requiem Review- KCW Today May 2015

 

Gramophone Magazine Rave for ESO’s “Wall of Water” CD

“…This is a wonderful performance of a wonderful concerto, completed by immaculate accompaniment from the English String Orchestra directed by the tireless Kenneth Woods. Very, very strongly recommended.”

 

From the May 2015 issue of Gramophone Magazine

 

[product id=2013]

Pritchard

Violin Concerto, “Wall of Water”

Harriet Mackenzie vn  English String Orchestra / Kenneth Woods

Nimbus Alliance (S) CD NI1555 (21’ . DDD

Every now and then, a new work comes along that simply takes one’s breath away. The Violin Concerto Wall of Water(2014) by Deborah Pritchard is one such. Composed last year “in response to the paintings by Maggi Hambling”—a sequence of at the time 13 paintings inspired by the Suffolk coast—the concerto is scored for a chamber group of 13 strings only: the soloist plus seven orchestral violinists, pairs of violas and cellos and a double-bass.

Deborah Pritchard compsing in Maggi Hambling's Suffolk studio
Deborah Pritchard composing in Maggi Hambling’s Suffolk studio

Despite the modest forces employed, the concerto is ablaze with colour across its twenty-one minutes, mirroring the transitions of colours in the Hambling paintings, with muted tones and colour ranges in the outer sections (corresponding roughly to paintings I-III and XII-XIII) enclosing a richer and more varied palette for paintings IV-XI, the whole framed by an opening solo violin cadenza and its varied reprise emerging from and returning to the darkness. (In live performance, the concerto can be accompanied by a synchronised video display of the Hambling paintings, but the music stands supremely well by itself.)

Wall of Water was written for Harriet Mackenzie (one member of the superb Retorica Duo, 2/13, 4/13), who plays this alternately elegiac and passionate music with a burning commitment and intensity that composers usually only dream of, but then she has been gifted a work whose high quality is rarely encountered. This is a wonderful performance of a wonderful concerto, completed by immaculate accompaniment from the English String Orchestra directed by the tireless Kenneth Woods. Very, very strongly recommended.

Guy Rickards

Gramophone Wall of Water Review

 

Next Care Home Concerts

Thursday 5th November 2015

ESO Wind Quartet: 

Catherine Handley flute,
Graeme Adams oboe,
Julia Holmes clarinet,
Keith Rubach bassoon;

Breme Residential Care Home, Bromsgrove;
Rashwood, Wychbold, Droitwich;
Dorset House Nursing & Residential Care Home, Droitwich

Programme

Clarke   Trumpet Voluntary

Elgar   Chanson de Matin

Trad   Greensleeves

Vivaldi   Allegro non molto from Concerto in G minor

Mozart   Eine Kleine Nachtmusik

Handel   La Réjouissance (from Music for the Royal Fireworks)

Richard Rodney Bennett   Travel Notes 2:

In an air-balloon; In a bath chair; Car-chase

Arlen   Somewhere Over the Rainbow

Arden-Taylor   Bach Goes to Sea

Traditional   Danny Boy

Traditional   Turkey in the Straw

Kern   Smoke Gets in Your Eyes

Cole Porter   Anything Goes

Haydn Wood   Roses of Picardy

 

 

CD of the Week

Our CD of the Week is BRAND NEW and very exciting.

 

Following on from the triumphant premiere of Wall of Water by Deborah Pritchard at LSO St Luke’s in October, we are delighted to announce the Nimbus Records are releasing the work as a special-edition CD-single in celebration of Maggi Hambling’s major show at the National Gallery. This powerful CD marks the ESO’s return to commercial recording after a break of many years.

The CD-single will be released to coincide with the Hambling opening on November 25th. You can order your copy here.

Click here to order via PayPal

London Triumph for ESO’s “Wall of Water” Debut

The ESO’s October 18th performance at LSO St Luke’s in London was a triumph with the public and critics alike.
Harriet Mackenzie at work in Maggi Hamnbling’s studio

The concert featured the world premiere of Deborah Pritchard’s new Violin Concerto, Wall of Water, based on the paintings of Maggi Hambling, which were projected during the performance. Harriet Mackenzie was the violin soloist. The programme also included the UK premieres of Kaija Saariaho’s “Terra memoria” and Emily Doolittle’s “falling still,” and a performance of Thea Musgrave’s “Green.” The concert was supported by Arts Council England and the commission of Wall of Water was co-funded by the Britten Pears Foundation.

 

The ESO will return to London for a second performance of Wall of Water at the National Gallery on January 30th. Details and booking information here. 

 

The Critical Response:

“In the event, Wall of Water proved to be an uncommonly interesting work.. the main sections of the work are superbly judged in terms of consolidation, unity and contrasts…Mackenzie returned for the first work in the second half, Emily Doolittle’s falling still, a haunting study inspired by the sounds of the natural world… Her’s is a very beautiful work, the shortest of the evening’s pieces, drawing the attentive listener in such as way as to invite – if not demand – quiet contemplation and sympathy. In many ways, this was the most purely musical work presented here, which also received what must have been an exemplary performance… Finally, a work by the Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho, Terra memoria, which opens and closes as a study in pianissimo, but which, as the music’s events unfold, continues to present aspects of quite simple ideas which are developed and threaded in enthralling fashion…. Throughout this absorbing concert, one must pay tribute to the players’ musicianship, self-evidently as one in their desire to do their best, and to Kenneth Woods, whose skill and undemonstrative mastery of the music was a joy to behold.”

Robert Matthew-Walker, Classical Source

 

“As the projected paintings merge into one another, Pritchard offers a number of angles on this seascape, presenting the new perspectives with the aid of an enchanting harmonic palette. Her use of the violin is atmospheric, utilising passages of hazy incantation and searing virtuosity to unfold the narrative. Soloist Harriet Mackenzie gave a commanding performance, her direct sound matching the energy and bold colours of the paintings behind her. The luminous brilliance of her upper range was particularly effective in the more involved central section, as art and composition alike introduced new colours. With a tight structure, beguiling harmonies and a fantastical atmosphere, this concerto reveals Pritchard to have an innate talent for pacing and drama….”

Katy Wright, BachTrack

 

“Set against recent paintings, Walls of Water, by Maggie Hambling, projected behind the players, it makes an indelible impression of heartfelt emotions, genuinely expressed in a broadly tonal idiom. The second cadenza could have been written by Mendelssohn. But this is not derivative music. It contains an ability to reach out to an audience without patronising it with easy sounds or intentions. But it is memorable and such an attribute is hard to achieve with success no matter what the choice of musical language is made…This is a lovely, elegiac work with a beauty all of its own. This in no way disparages Hambling’s marvellous large scale images, so full of dynamic movement and restrained colour….  Mackenzie was a willing collaborator in bringing this violin concert to our attention. She poured a beauty of tone into the labyrinth of sound that the audience is drawn into in what is an ambitious work, full of nuances and colours. It is also a work that makes demands of considerable virtuosity on the part of the soloist and Mackenzie has a formidable technique that was put to best purpose inprojecting the music into the hearts and minds of the listeners. All the works heard were done full justice by Kenneth Woods and his fine group of players. He is a conductor who polishes and refines the works under his baton so that each work at this concert was heard to best possible effect.”

Edward Clark, Musical Opinion

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Triumphant ESO debut in Elgar Concert Hall

 

The English String Orchestra’s debut concert at the new Elgar Concert Hall in Birmingham was a resounding success with audience and critics alike. Both musicians and audience members were quick to hail the venue’s marvellous acoustics, sightlines and amenities. The orchestra responded to the rapturous audience reception with a touching encore- the world-premiere of Donald Fraser’s new orchestration of Elgar’s song, “Pleading.”

 

Details of the orchestra’s upcoming 2015 Elgar Concert Hall season from the ESO will be announced later in October.

Birmingham Post critic Norman Sinchecombe hailed the successful concert with a four-star review in the Birmingham Post, available here. According to the Post:

 

John McCabe modestly describes his new work for double string orchestra as “a big slow piece with quick bits”. Pilgrim is inspired by a symphony of Vaughan Williams, one of McCabe’s musical heroes.

Vaughan Williams’ fifth symphony used themes from his opera A Pilgrim’s Progress but, surprisingly, it’s not that sublime work which fired McCabe’s imagination – it was the old man’s fiery and feisty ninth symphony.

So there’s a questioning, questing turbulent character to McCabe’s work: a timorous, niggling theme, passing from one section leader to another, is resolved only right at the end in a well-deserved moment of tranquillity.

The performance, conducted by Kenneth Woods, was vigorous and thrusting, maintaining tension even through extended quiet passages.

The orchestra was at its finest in Vaughan Williams’ wonderful Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis. Woods placed the string quartet in the centre of the first orchestra with second at the back of the platform , giving the spatial interplay of the themes ideal clarity.

The contributions by the first violin (Michael Bochmann) and viola (Helen Roberts) were tender and touching. Fittingly, given the venue, Elgar’s Introduction and Allegro for Strings got an exhilarating performance: rhythmically crisp with the composer’s “devil of a fugue” winningly despatched – a fitting climax to a well-programmed concert.

 

The first-ever English String Orchestra rehearsal in Elgar Concert Hall
The first-ever English String Orchestra rehearsal in Elgar Concert Hall