Orchestra of the Swan’s Earthcycle brings consciousness to the problems of our time – Seen and Heard International

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Orchestra of the Swan’s Earthcycle brings consciousness to the problems of our time – Seen and Heard International


Orchestra of the Swan’s Earthcycle brings consciousness to the problems of our time – Seen and Heard InternationalUnited Kingdom Earthcycle: David Gordon (keyboards), Jackie Oates (vocals), Orchestra of the Swan / David Le Page (violin, director). Stratford Playhouse, Stratford-upon-Avon, 7.2.2023. (CC)

Trad., arr. Le PageThe Birds in Spring
David GordonWindigo
Vivaldi (arr. Gordon) – La primavera (Spring), RV 269

Trad., arr. Le PageThe Lark within the Morning
David GordonThe Elephant and the Moth
Vivaldi (arr. Gordon) – L’property (Summer), RV 315

Trad., arr. Le PageBright Phoebus
David GordonFeeling the Chill
Vivaldi (arr. Gordon) – L’autumno (Autumn), RV 293

Trad., arr. Le PageThe Robin’s Petition
David GordonThe Winter’s Tears
Vivaldi (arr. Gordon) – L’inverno (Winter), RV 297

The Stratford-upon-Avon primarily based ensemble Orchestra of the Swan is likely one of the most ingenious teams round within the UK as we speak – this extends from their programming to their use of multimedia to the themes they tackle. Their performances have a tendency in the direction of the mesmeric; their movies are phenomenally ingenious.

Earthcycle tackles local weather change. David Le Page, Artistic Director of the Orchestra of the Swan writes a few freak climate incident in his dwelling Lincolnshire village, resulting in a broader consideration of how local weather change impacts the Earth and its pure rhythms. The coinciding of this with the three hundredth anniversary of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons is well timed, due to this fact, and Baroque/jazz musician and member of the Orchestra of the Swan, David Gordon, has ready a brand new association for this occasion. Each concerto was prefaced by astonishingly highly effective performances of conventional songs by folks singer Jackie Oates and by a bit by Gordon. Both lighting and movie along with efficiency conspire in the direction of a heightened consciousness of the problems at hand with out the shock ways employed by newspaper headlines

The movies we see are every impressed by the related season – ultra-frozen winters, summer season bush fires and so forth, plus reminders of man’s equipment and energy. But juxtaposed with these scary occasions are reminders of the wonder – and, certainly, energy – of Gaia. As Le Page says, ‘It is the role of art, I believe, to express hope, to challenge complacency, to educate, to dream, to convey the beauty of what we already have and, above all, to urge us not to take anything for granted.’

Beautifully put, and it’s clear simply as a lot thought has gone into the Earthcycle expertise. Performers have been often spotlit on the display screen, towards these visuals or in isolation; a shot of the Earth from house, blue and delightful, acted as a reminder of our planet’s intrinsic majesty.

To complement the concepts behind the occasion, there are two podcasts with The Guardian environmental journalist George Monbiot and Madeleine Finlay (hyperlinks under evaluation). Monbiot is essentially the most eloquent of audio system; Finlay affords guided meditations, one other ‘way in’ to the topic, in a podcast aimed toward kids of major faculty age (with their adults in attendance).

As one can see from the programme itemizing above, the night unfolded in 4 triplicities (esoteric numerologists would have a subject day – I’m wondering if it was deliberate?). Each three started with completely spellbinding performances of David Le Page’s beautiful preparations of conventional songs, every related to the season at hand.

Jackie Oates has essentially the most mesmeric and remarkably expressive voice (as one can hear, additionally, from her albums). Le Page’s association of The Birds within the Spring references Vivaldi neatly, earlier than settling into the people idiom earlier than David Gordon’s fabulously ingenious Windigo (with its jazz harpsichord components) led to the primary of the 4 Vivaldi concertos.

David Gordon is an enchanting artist. In this one live performance, he effortlessly moved from piano to harpsichord, from jazz harpsichord to essentially the most ingenious continuo taking part in inside a Baroque context I’ve ever heard. Just just a few days Christophe Rousset realised figured basses in impeccable Baroque fashion on the Wigmore Hall; right here was a really completely different, freer tackle the function of the harpsichord (at occasions, within the Vivaldi, virtually a co-soloist – definitely an instrument in dialogue with Le Page’s violin). How brilliant after that sounded the primary motion of Vivaldi’s ‘Spring’, its gestures chopped, virtually trendy. Violins chirruped like Jackie Oates’s birds. There was no doubting Le Page’s virtuosity, both, his sound brilliant, centered, each word in place. That modernity of Vivaldi’s writing got here to the fore within the punctuating violas of the central Largo e pianissimo sempre, Le Page’s violin singing above in a seamless line; it was left to the finale to convey us again into full vernal daylight, a sprightly Allegro pastorale.

Moving to summer season, the brilliant folksong The Lark within the Morning (nothing to do with Vaughan Williams) contained not solely exceptional vocalisation however some equally exceptional scoring, too (staccato violins towards voice significantly efficient). For summer season, Gordon’s personal piece was rather more modern in really feel to his spring providing. The Elephant and the Moth was all scurrying strings, sudden juxtapositions of calm, then lounge jazz: a exceptional conflation of idioms in a small house. Visually, each within the folksong and in Vivaldi’s ‘Summer’ we noticed blue, projected water – however was it a swimming pool, water in man-made captivity? Against this, stunning photographs of Nature herself, juxtaposed with scorched earth.

How Le Page and his gamers emphasised the modernity of Vivaldi’s writing within the ‘Summer’ concerto, separating the phrases of the preliminary Allegro non molto, taking us right into a gestural house earlier than the vigour of the Allegro, and the sudden return of the opening. Here, Gordon’s harpsichord contributions appeared to succeed in a peak of imaginative play. The contrasts inherent within the music (the second motion, too strikes between juxtaposed adagios and prestos). Le Page’s violin sang sweetly towards gently transferring strings beneath, halted by sudden tremolandi. How fierce the power of the finale, too: the brilliant, scorching gentle of the solar, maybe. Demands on the soloist are fierce on this motion, and Le Page triumphed, his power and dynamism all-consuming.

Autumn is a time for change, and maybe introspection after the blazing gentle of summer season. Open intervals on strings appeared to usher in maybe a way of some vacancy, of loss for the brightness of summer season. Gordon’s Feeling the Chill (definitely seasonally related in title) sought to convey collectively jazz and Vivaldian gesture, doing so brilliantly. Yellow/orange lighting ushered us into the 12 months’s sluggish darkening. The Vivaldi was spellbinding, the clear climax of this triplicity, Gordon’s harpsichord solo of the second motion great, a halo of strings unforgettable. The tight rhythms of the primary motion have been complemented by the bounce of ‘La caccia’ (The Hunt); right here the harpsichord provided an impartial voice working with the soloist. Chamber music of the best calibre.

And so, to winter and The Robin’s Petition. A solo cello’s sustained word heard towards Vivaldian gestures within the violin; scoring was brilliantly imagined right here, two solo violas towards the voice. The piece ends with out decision earlier than Gordon’s The Water’s Tears provided large, open registral house between violin and low double bass (representing the barrenness of winter, I think about). Quite a lot of gestures, some modernist, some referring again to Vivaldi. Piano with frozen string textures towards a backdrop of the Earth made for actual emotional clout and the proper encapsulation of the season at hand. Finally, ‘Linverno’ (Winter), its opening arresting, strings intentionally scratchy, Vivaldi at his most trendy, Le Page’s violin virtually improvising earlier than the self-discipline of the rhythms of the sooner music got here in. Le Page’s management over his instrument is astonishing, as we heard within the soloistic outbursts on this first motion; he’s able to nice, and sudden, lyricism, too. How fascinating to have a piano subverting the sluggish motion as we noticed footage of ice caps melting. Improvisation discovered its approach into the finale, Le Page completely mesmeric on the opening earlier than the music merely took off – but the Orchestra of the Swan maintained its sense of taut ensemble.

An unforgettable expertise. Music can convey consciousness to the problems of our time in a profound approach, far deeper than screaming headlines – one wants assume solely of Stephen Langridge’s Gothenburg eco-Ring and its message of rebirth amongst devastation.

The Orchestra of the Swan’s subsequent album, Echoes, will likely be launched in May. However, a single (Bach Prelude in B minor, BWV 855, arr. Siloti/Le Page) will likely be out there from 15 February.

Colin Clarke

Podcast particular person hyperlinks: George Monbiot click on right here and Madeleine Finlay click on right here. The paperback of George Moniot’s guide, REGENESIS: Feeding the World with out Devouring the Planet will likely be launched by Penguin on 25 May (the hardback is at the moment out there).

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