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Music Concert: Northern Sinfonia/Gourlay

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  • Music Concert: Northern Sinfonia/Gourlay

    The Times (London)
    February 6, 2013 Wednesday
    Edition 1; National Edition

    Northern Sinfonia/Gourlay
    Concert

    by: Geoff Brown

    Queen Elizabeth Hall ****

    Last weekend the focus in the Southbank's Rest is Noise series was on
    nationalism's rise early in the 20th century. Four concerts, seven
    films and 25 talks were featured - but none, I bet, was as warming and
    foot-tapping as the Northern Sinfonia's tribute to classical music's
    "folk pioneers". The Sinfonia's sound, sturdy and fresh, was pleasure
    enough, particularly when we had just the strings, coursing so crisply
    and succulently through Bartók's Romanian Folk Dances and four
    wonderfully heart-aching songs gathered by Komitas Vardapet, the
    tragic saviour of Armenian folk music who lost his mind in 1915 during
    the Ottoman Empire's Armenian genocide.

    Vigorously conducted by Andrew Gourlay, the concert also worked very
    well as a welcome pack for classical music. Everything was shortish
    and pungent, scattered with friendly commentary from the programme's
    deviser, the queen of the Northumbrian pipes, Kathryn Tickell, who
    should have played her noble instrument more often. The geographic
    spread was admirable, with North Country folk settings nestling
    alongside soul-shakers from Eastern Europe, bumptious American
    delights such as Ives's marching band mash-up Putnam's Camp, Percy
    Grainger's iconoclastic wonders and hot blooms from Brazil and Spain.

    Individual musicians were equally on show. The Sinfonia leader Bradley
    Creswick's smiling brio proved essential in the tuneful chaos of
    Ives's violin sonata movement In the Barn, while the cellist Louisa
    Tuck easily survived the testing work-out of Gaspar Cassadó's Sardana,
    a spin through Catalonia's national dance. Another cap must be doffed
    to the pianist Kate Thompson, valiantly bashing with elbows and fists
    during Henry Cowell's The Lilt of the Reel, but swaying tenderly in
    the Atraente polka of Chiquinha Gonzaga, the Brazilian feminist
    extraordinary. Such joyful, inspiring and lifeenhancing music-making.

    Geoff Brown

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