A Musical Offering of Bachian Proportions
Saturday, January 20, 2018
Bramwell Tovey, Douglas Finch, Alexander Weimann, Rodney Sharman & Jocelyn Morlock |
New Music for Old Instruments - After Bach
My Rosemary and I attended last night’s New Music For Old
Instruments – After Bach at Christ Churh Cathedral featuring the Pacific Baroque Orchestra under the Musical
Direction of Alexander Weimann.
The concert was a collaboration involving the Pacific
Baroque Orchestra, Early Music Vancouver and the Vancouver New Music Festival
that ends this Monday.
The four contemporary composers of the program (all four
were present), Jocelyn Morlock, Douglas Finch, Rodney Sharman and Bramwell
Tovey) were asked to compose works with some connection to Bach and with the
exact instrumentation of the Pacific Baroque Orchestra that evening.
For me what made this concert special besides the awesome
performance of VSO Musical Director Bramwell Tovey on solo piano, Alexander Weimann on solo harpsichord and
then the two four-hands on the piano was a moment that I had not really noticed
before after many observed live playings of Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 5,
BWV 150.
We all know
about that, unprecedented in Bach’s time, of the harpsichord solo in the first
Allegro movement. Vancouver Early Music Composer in Residence, Rodney Sharman
did praise (to the stratosphere) Alexander Weimann’s playing of that solo.
For me it was the trio of harpsichord (Weimann), flute (Soile
Stratkauskas) and violin (Chloe Meyers) in the beginning of the second Affetuoso movement. It was beyond
lovely. I don’t even know if the expression exquisite does any justice to that
flute and violin together from our vantage point on the first row facing them.
Soile Stratkauskas, Chloe Meyers & Alexander Weimann |
The rest of
the concert, was Bach-inspired works by composers Jocelyn Morlock, Douglas
Finch, Rodney Sharman, Bramwell Tovey and Györgi Ligeti (diseased 2006). This last one was a Weimann harpsichord solo of which more below.
But I have
to begin with Rodney Sharman and his Tell & Show (not show and tell!)
method. Sharman made sure that every composer explained as thoroughly as they
could their work but Sharman went one further. For his piece Snared Harmony he
brought out his baroque flute (learning it since October) to explain how it
works and its capabilities. Demonstrating it (as best he could!) it made
understanding some of the odd notes we heard when his piece was performed. And,
of course Soile Stratkauskas was top notch with her flute for this work.
Alexander Weimann & Rodney Sharman telling and showing |
Throughout
the night including conducting Douglas Finch’s Chorale Threnody you could not
miss Sharman, the man with the green jacket.
Not all the
music was accessible to our non-musicians’ ears. In particular I must cite
Finch’s Chorale Threnody which was originally composed for piano (Corey Hamm)
and erhu (Nicole Li). I heard that piece performed last year but I could not
remember the resemblance. Since I love Charles Ives I was ready to accept that
Finch’s polytonality like Ives’s has to be heard more than once. I can attest
to the fact that in the last few years I have listened to repeated live
performances by the Microcosmos String Quartet (headed by Marc Destrubé) of
Bartok’s Quartets but I still cannot tell them apart! I hope I am able to
listen to Chorale Threnody again.
Rodney Sharman & Jocelyn Morlock |
Jocelyn
Morlock’s Revenant (came back to haunt me as I originally heard it played by
the Burney Ensemble) was the kind of music that Morlock excels at. She lures
you in with tonality and before you know it you are in uncharted territories
without knowing it. To my amateur ears, her work sounded as if Bach had hopped
on a time machine to LA and composed the work sometime in the 20th
century while drinking Gatorade. Rosemary smiled during the performance.
The playing
of the Brandenburg was extra special as the orchestra was reduced to a core
that consisted of Stratkauskas on flute, Chloe Myers, violin, Christi Myers,
violin, Mieka Michaux, viola, Nathan Whitaker, cello and Natalie Macke,
violone., What this meant is that Weimann’s harpsichord could be heard at all
times!
Now for my
boo-boo. For the pictures I took here I used my brand new Fuji X-E3 which has
an electronic shutter that not even whispers. It is completely silent.
During the
Ligeti Passacaglia Ungherese, a solo piece for harpsichord (an almost chaconne
which is my fave, fave) my camera slipped from my lap to the floor. The CBC
recorded this show (the EMV website will inform us when the concert airs on the
radio). Chloe Myers who was turning Weimann’s music stared right at me and I
wanted to disappear.
The last
piece of the night was Bramwell Tovey’s Sinfonia Della Passione. It sounded a
tad like Bach but the best part of it (besides the fact that my Rosemary loved
it and she rarely likes anything) was the smile on Mieka Michaux’s face. This
composition put her viola left, right and centre.
When I
photographed the Five Amigos in the Christ Church Cathedral gender-neutral
powder room I thought of the fact that Tovey has been a Vancouver institution
for years. Will this city understand its loss when he leaves shortly for other
shores.
In my daily
NY Times I have enjoyed through the years the articles about Tovey conducting
the Summer Pops in New York. In the photo he is always wearing a white tux
jacket. Invariably the writer mentions how Tovey can make attendees comfortable
with his explanations.
And who would have known that like Weimann he can play a
mean jazz piano, compose and just one more thing…
Bach’s
Musical Offering occurred at the court of Frederick The Great where the emperor
(not a bad flute player) challenged Bach to play something on the spot with the
listening of a theme right then.
Both Tovey
and Weimann repeated (somewhat) that lofty feat after only listening to a short
Bach theme played by Sharman (not at his Emperor’s best) to each one of them.
Weimann ended his version with a surprisingly fast ending that I was too stupid
record on my silent camera.
I was privy
(I have a good ear) to the fact and I can predict here, now, that sometime this
year there will be a new composition by Jocelyn Morlock for Early Music
Vancouver’s great-idea-in-progress, new music for old instruments.