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CONFERENCE: BASBWE 2007 BASBWE INTERNATIONAL WIND FESTIVAL GLASGOW 28th June – 1st July 2007 Thirteen concerts, thirteen lectures, two conducting workshops, one repertoire session – this was a Festival covering a huge range of music and ensembles, from the refined Harmonie of Haydn and Beethoven to Big Band Jazz, the latest contemporary concertos from USA and the Czech Republic, world previews anticipating the following week’s WASBE Conference, a fairy story with a twist, and a world premiere from one of England’s leading composers, James MacMillan. Our American colleagues tend to put catchy slogans to their conferences – INSPIRE – INVIGORATE OR REFRESH - REVITALISE - REJUVENATE OR CONDUCTORS & COMPOSERS - CONNECT & CHANGE I
have never attended any wind conference or Festival with such a wealth of
professional virtuosity on display in the service of really great music. Whether
it was for wind was irrelevant, but there were no strings attached, and my list
below of new repertoire which I recommend exploring is limited and leaves out a
great deal of super music which you might prefer. Anyway, this is my choice for
my next dozen concerts, if I had them to conduct. I have omitted some remarkable
chamber works, such as Cinderella or the Haydn, as well as all that jazz….and what a
wealth we were offered in clinics and sessions. CONCERTOS.
The
opening gala concert set the scene, given by the Wind Orchestra of our hosts,
the Maximiliano
Martin, principal clarinet of the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, and James Gourlay,
Director of Music at the RSAMD. Martin
was the soloists in the British premiere of
Michael Daugherty’s James
Gourlay has been assiduously building a repertoire of
The
concert itself was a game of two halves, starting with Sowetan
Spring by James MacMillan and Edwin Roxburgh’s Time’s
Harvest, two uncompromising contemporary works, the Roxburgh aimed at a good
High School or Honours Band, while the MacMillan demands professional players on
top form, especially in the horn section. Both were given convincing
performances. In the second half, the musical mood changed, the Filas Tuba
Concerto was always interesting, often charming, Whitacre’s Cloudburst
seemed old fashioned and out of place as did the wind band arrangement of
Malcolm Arnold’s Peterloo.
One
exciting factor in conferences or festivals is the chance to meet composers,
hear them talk about their works either formally or informally. Philip Sparke, No
time for lunch at this conference; from 1.pm there was a concert again full of
virtuosity, given by the RSAMD Faculty Wind Ensemble. Two world premieres here,
the biggest for wind ensemble was Rory Boyle’s angry Behemoths,
a vicious attack on the proliferation of wind farms in some of Rehearsals
meant that I had to miss what looked to be another excellent programme by Brian
Boddice and the West of Scotland Schools Concert Band, with Eddie McGuire’s Sirocco,
Marco Pütz’ Dance Sequence and the
world premiere of Edwin Roxburgh’s glittering Aeolian
Carillons. JOHN
WALLACE, PRINCIPAL, SOLOIST AND SECOND TRUMPET So
to Thursday evening and a pre-WASBE concert by the Irish Youth Wind Ensemble; I
have always loved Finnegan’s Wake by Archie Potter, one of the few really funny
pieces in our repertoire, and our programme continued with another work by Pütz,
the British Premiere of his Trumpet
Concerto. This is a fine work in three movements, cast in a traditional
language but as with all of his music, characterised by unexpected turns of
phrase, and unusual harmonic twists. The slow movement is built on the Bach
Chorale and we are left wanting more, The first and last movements are classical
in structure, in regular sonata form,
Marco
Pütz has, I think, a knack of writing extremely well for solo instruments, and
this concerto, like the Flute Concerto which we heard on Saturday, is a major
addition to the repertoire. It was a joint commission between Schartz of the
Royal National Orchestra of Wales and my wife and myself in memory of our third
son, and the IYWE concert had two more commissions, the world premiere of
Stephen McNeff’s moving song cycle, Image
in Stone, and Kenneth Hesketh’s uproariously passionate Serbian lovesong
with variations, Vranjanka. I am of course biased, but I think that all three works
will prove to be very popular, and would recommend anyone looking for new
repertoire to explore these works, whether traditional by Pütz, ethnic by
Hesketh, or for voice and smaller ensemble, by McNeff. CINDERELLA
ON SATURDAY Saturday at 9.30 found us again marvelling at the RSAMD student wind ensemble, giving a superb performance of Rory Boyle’s tour de force, Cinderella for narrator, wind quintet and piano. It is hard to bring off and sustain a joke in music, but this version of Roald Dahl is quite brilliant. It was followed by the Poulenc Sextet, full or wit, charm and pathos, great programming. TWO
SLOW PREMIERES We
keep commenting on the problems of writing easy music for schools, and amusing
music for all of us. Equally hard is writing slow music which does not become
sentimental, and the lunchtime concert had premieres of two slow pieces. Tim
Jackson’s fine Passacaglia
was originally written as the last movement of a work for thirty-two horns, and
on hearing this I immediately commissioned the transcription for wind. It is a
wonderful work of seven minutes continuous development, half the length of S.L.O.W.
by Bill Connor, or to give it the full title Sun Low Over Water, another
extraordinary bit of sustained writing with a filmic quality which never becomes
Hollywoody. The Glasgow Wind Band gave assured performances of both, together
with the Pütz Flute Concerto and a Shostakovich Scherzo arranged by Andrew Duncan. A
rehearsal sadly meant another missed concert, the joint Sheffield and Manchester
Universities Band, playing Adam Swayne’s Goe
Down, Hoe Down, Holst’s Hammersmith,
two Grainger marches, a 70th birthday present to David Bedford of his
Ronde for Isolde, and the latest
commission by Charles Camilleri, Il Nostro
Tempo. … the more we encourage composers to use the wind ensemble, the better it's going to be, particularly with the generation of wind players that’s out there now Sir Simon Rattle Quarter
of a century ago when BASBWE was formed, we looked forward to the day when there
would be a proliferation of wind orchestras to match the fine amateur symphony
orchestras throughout the country. A lasting legacy of this Conference must be
the newly formed Scottish National Wind Orchestras, conductor Russell Cowieson,
who gave the Gala Concert on Saturday evening in another well planned programme,
plenty of contrast Secret
Rites
Akira Miyoshi Old
Home Days
Charles Ives arr Elkus An
American Song
Alan Fletcher Resonance
Christopher Marshall Adagio
Joaquin Rodrigo An
Elegy for Spiel
Ernst Toch Two
witty pieces, the Ives and the Toch, an extraordinary Japanese piece by a pupil
of Dutilleux which in some five minutes encompasses a huge variety of styles and
textures, and a new piece from Alan Fletcher which was for me the only
disappointing performance, not quite capturing the mazy dreamlike quality of
some performances I have heard. The
end of Resonance was beautifully managed under the eloquent baton of UR OF THE CHALDEES
Apart from the virtuosity of Staphane Rancourt, the outstanding performance was perhaps the Rodrigo Adagio, difficult to manage and catch the changes of mood, hard to balance, but this is a very good community ensemble of enormous potential, under a conductor who is developing all of the time. What a great project this is, and let us hope for some recordings, some broadcasts, some commissions and regular concert series. SECOND MANCHESTER SCHOOL Manchester and Sheffield Universities Joint Honours Band It was sometimes difficult to get a real glimpse of the works in the repertoire session on Sunday morning. Rehearsals went on during the session, discussions with the audience and orchestra resulted in textures emerging which did not add much to our perception of the pieces. Jim Pywell’s Yellow Stripe I would like to visit again, subjecting as it does Western compositional techniques to African musical influences, a kind of latterday Sowetan Spring. I could not make much of Chris Noble’s Furore on a first hearing, and it was a relief to settle into the cosy world of Hans Christian Andersen and the Suite written by Martin Ellerby. I already knew Daniel Basford’s Selections from Variations on a National Theme though you don’t hear much of the original. He is a bright young composer as are two other Manchester trained composers, Peter Meechan whose Hymn for Africa is another ingenious set of variations, aimed very successfully at less experienced bands, and Emily Howard whose Deep Soul Diving I commissioned. It came over strongly here, with an elegance lacking in a great deal of our wind music. Three composers to watch out; is there a Second Manchester School on the cards? Conductors were Chairman-Elect, Philip Robinson, Treasurer-Elect, Tony Houghton and Mark Heron whose input into our website, Winds and the Conference is enormous. BASBWE is in safe hands with the younger generation taking over. I was unable to get to many of the lectures and discussions, but one I was delighted not to miss was on the Wind Band Movement in Democratic Portugal given by the very engaging and eloquent Andre Granjo.A passionate expert on the past of the Portuguese band movement, he is working hard on bringing the bands up-to-date with contemporary ideas and getting the best Portuguese composers to write. This was followed by West Lothian Schools Jazz Ensemble in a programme covering a wide range of styles. Jim Pywell asked me why wind orchestras cannot play as rhythmically as jazz bands, I always wonder why we don’t have the same passion for our repertoire and performance as they do. GUY WOOLFENDEN OBE, AT SEVENTY
To the final concert in the deadly position of Sunday afternoon. Guy as former Chairman knows well the dangers, and it seemed disaster would be compounded when NOW, the Northampton Orchestral Winds, were unable to get the money together for the trip to Glasgow. An inspired suggestion by the Artistic organisers resulted in a wind Dectet, and a delightful programme of Haydn and Beethoven, framing three chamber works by Guy. Wit, charm, elegance, sometimes passion, all of the emotional elements which we look for in music were there, without the noise and tub-thumping that so much of our repertoire calls for. This was urbane music-making at its best, and the soloists of NOW were given their head and allowed to shine. Guy wrote our first BASBWE commission back in 1983, Gallimaufry. Since then, he and Jane his wife and publisher, have contributed enormously to the wealth of music which has built up in the last quarter of a century, both through his own compositions and their publications. They have both been on the BASBWE Executive and have worked tirelessly for conductors, composers and players. This Conference caught a lot of the excitement of the 80’s and 90’s, when we were hearing new works by Guy and others, hearing great bands emerging, getting involved in education and recording projects and developing links with WASBE, CBDNA and other associations. The Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama has superb facilities second to none, with a wealth of studio and concert hall space and a great exhibition space for the Trade. Musically this was one of the strongest I can remember, with virtuosity fused with great composition and the strongest support from the bands and ensembles. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||