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Voice Of The Faithfull Joins The Orchestra

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  • Voice Of The Faithfull Joins The Orchestra

    VOICE OF THE FAITHFULL JOINS THE ORCHESTRA
    By Andrea Rea

    News Letter, UK
    Oct 4 2005

    It has been a busy time for the arts here recently, with performing
    organisations professional, amateur and in between beginning their
    season's work and some companies already on tour. It's hard sometimes
    to decide which concert, recital or show to attend and now it's
    October, and soon there will be even more performances to tempt us.

    The Belfast Festival at Queen's opens its many doors in a few weeks,
    and there are concerts, recitals, films, plays, exhibitions and
    lectures to choose from. My advice would be to try and sample a bit
    of everything. You'll finish the fortnight a good deal more tired
    than when you began it, but come away enriched and with a bit of luck,
    challenged too. The brilliant thing about the festival is that it gives
    you a chance to see and hear things you might not have experienced
    before. For example, during the popular Music at Ten series in the
    Harty Room, there's a recital of baroque cello and theorbo and you
    might not have heard a theorbo lately unless you managed to see Opera
    Theatre Company's recent production of Monteverdi, in which case you
    saw two.

    It looks like a huge lute and is a very interesting, versatile
    instrument. In the same series there's a concert of solo recorder
    music - also something that doesn't come around every day. The music
    of Armenian/American composer Alan Hovhaness is being explored in
    a concert at Clonard Monastery, with the Ulster Orchestra and the
    Belfast Philharmonic choir.

    Hovhaness writes extraordinarily beautiful music which prepared the
    way for composers like PĀrt and Rautavaara, both of whom have been
    featured in past Festivals.

    One of the rock/classical crossovers is Sixties' chanteuse Marianne
    Faithfull at the opening concert, with the Ulster Orchestra and
    Renaissance Singers, but for more challenging stuff, be sure to get
    to at least one of the performances listed under the New Music section
    of the Festival programme.

    Quite a few of these revolve around the music of Steve Reich,
    the experimental and original American composer who celebrates his
    60th birthday next year. Reich once described hearing music he was
    unfamiliar with as 'suddenly walking into a room you'd never been
    in before and wanting to stay forever'. Reich's own music has been
    described as minimalist, using percussion effects and phasing, as
    well as aspects of Western classical music and vernacular and ethnic
    material. His large work for orchestra and choir, The Desert Music,
    is being performed as part of the closing concert of the Festival.

    The choir in question will be the National Chamber Choir, who gave
    a concert in St George's Church in Belfast last Friday night.

    It was a bit like a whole festival in one performance, so varied was
    the programme, although with an overall theme. The concert Motets and
    the Bard examined the marriage of words and music in motets composed
    over the course of five centuries or so. The National Chamber Choir
    has always been known for its ability to manage an extraordinarily
    wide range of repertoire, and this concert showcased that ability
    wonderfully.

    Their conductor Celso Antunes gets quite a red-blooded sound from them,
    and makes clever and often essential use of different arrangements of
    singers on stage. The singers themselves come from diverse backgrounds
    and cultures. In addition to Ireland north and south, the countries
    of Poland, New Zealand, Latvia and Holland are represented by choir
    members, all of whom live in Ireland now. The concert was stunningly
    well-presented and an eye and ear opener for anyone there. Do try
    to hear them at the Festival, and while you're at it, have a go at
    something else that takes you off the beaten track. You'll be glad
    you did.

    http://www.newsletter.co.uk/story/23026

    --Boundary_(ID_9bWzkbit+Xy55ii6cwVLZw)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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