MaW’s Blog

Sunday, 12th August 2007

On work and music and summertime

Filed under: Life, Music I Play — MaW @ 17:29

So I’ve not blogged for ages. Nothing new there, I hear the masses cry - at least, I would, if the total audience of this blog was large enough to be described by the term ‘the masses’.

Why the silence? Well, it’s largely because things of great interest have been happening. I know that’s not the traditional reason not to blog, but when searching for a job one doesn’t really wish to shout about it too much on the Internet in a form which will be easy for one’s prospective employers to find - not that I have a moment’s doubt that there’s already a whole pile of incriminating information out there about me. Evidently none of it was really serious, because I got a job and have been working full time for three weeks now. It’s not my dream job, I shall be honest, but it’s a job and it’s a pretty good one really. The pay’s entirely reasonable, the office environment is fantastic, and the people are also nice. The commute could only be better if it was a short walk down the road (rather than a short walk, a reasonable tram ride and another short walk after that).

The major problem is that, as with all software development which takes place against a background of established code, there’s established code. A lot of it. Ten years and more of it. Much of it is poorly documented (by which I mean not documented in any way whatsoever). Quite a bit of it is poorly written, having suffered from the many demons associated with haste, neglect and modification by other people (hint: documentation helps with that). It seems intentions are changing. My team have generally agreed that code should be documented and so forth. Unfortunately we’re now arguing about how it should be documented, but at least it’s a start.

Music things have been on a bit of a hiatus. As it’s the summer, many groups and lessons have been disrupted. I’ve not had any viol or recorder lessons for ages, and my only outlet is playing Telemann sonatas all afternoon at the weekend (I’m sure my neighbours are simply delighted…) and going to SRP once a month, which is an absolute lifesaver. I can’t wait for the start of the school year to return groups and lessons to normality, although I will miss playing with the University early music group.

Still, you can’t have everything.

Tuesday, 5th June 2007

Swimming

Filed under: Life — MaW @ 17:48

I’ve not been swimming for about two years. Possibly longer. This afternoon I went to the local pool, and I’d forgotten just how relaxing it is. Relaxing in a ‘just one more length ow my shoulders are hurting’ sort of way, but relaxing indeed. I’m buzzing in the glow of exercise-induced feel-good chemicals, and determined to make this a regular thing.

Everyone who knows me has permission to nag me if they suspect I’m not doing it, by the way. I need to shed some of this flab that’s appearing.

Sunday, 13th May 2007

Another concert…

Filed under: Music I Play — MaW @ 18:25

I played in this one. Each year my recorder teacher Wendy Hancock puts on a concert in Chilwell which is on the outskirts of Nottingham’s metropolitan area. The concert is always free with a retiring collection for a chosen charity (Marie Curie Cancer Care this year), and the performers are described as ‘Students and Friends of Wendy Hancock’. Another tradition is to finish the concert with at least one very loud piece of music in which everybody plays. In order to accommodate that many musicians, the music is usually a polychoral piece, which leads to some interesting consequences in terms of sound, especially since the church isn’t really big enough for everybody to stand up and play at once!

Nonetheless, it’s all good fun. Last year I played with the university early music group and a solo which was taken from the pieces I was at the time preparing for grade 4 descant. I was terrified, played moderately poorly and vacated the stage as soon as was humanly possible.

What a difference a year’s extra lessons makes. Having passed grade 4 and grade 5 (the latter on treble recorder) since then, and played in a few more lunchtime concerts, I’ve become rather more confident and capable. Again the university group played - one piece by our viol players, and one piece combined strings and recorders, repeating the Telemann sonata for six melody instruments in A minor from our last lunchtime concert, which was a resounding success then and almost a resounding success last night. The audience liked it, but we know how it was supposed to go…

I also played with the Mundy Consort, which was much much easier music that we played better than we’ve ever played it before. Terribly pleased with that, because Rachel at least isn’t at all used to group playing or performance, being only ten. She played very well though, and so did Nadia and Patsy who completed that group for the evening (oh and thanks to Christine Ransom for filling in the fifth part in All In A Garden Green for us in the absence of a fifth member of the consort actually being able to attend).

And so there was my solo. This time it was an unnamed movement from Jacques Paisible’s Sonata 8 in C minor. A nice piece, not too challenging except to actually play well, accompanied by Phillip Weller on harpsichord, and Sarah Cook on baroque ‘cello. They’re both wonderful musicians, and it was a joy to play with them even through the performance nerves.

I actually got what I think might have been some genuine applause, and people told me afterwards I played very well, although they could have just been being polite I suppose. Still, definitely much better than last year. I could get to like this sort of thing.

Then the final pieces were stupendous amounts of fun. We were joined by Sinfonia Chorale, who provided the vocals, and Phillip on the pipe organ, one choir of twenty-ish recorder players and everyone who had a stringed instrument playing that in the other choir. We belted out some South American baroque music, and it’s still going through my head now.

Well, alternating with the UK’s Eurovision entry from last night anyway.

Tuesday, 17th April 2007

Kate Rusby at the Nottingham Playhouse

Filed under: Music — MaW @ 19:53

Firstly, thanks to the two people who have so far found and commented on my thoughts on Loreena McKennitt’s concert at the Barbican the other week. Google seems to be doing its job.

The other evening I was fortunate enough to go to the second of two performances by Kate Rusby and her band at the Playhouse in Nottingham. I’ve not been to the venue before, but it could hardly be more conveniently located and it was very nice indeed. Not awe-inspiring like the Barbican, but considerably smaller and on what might be termed a more realistic scale. The seat was comfortable, although a bit low — but most seats are a bit low for me so this can’t really be levelled as a serious criticism!

Kate Rusby herself has lost none of her on-stage charm. When she walks out into the spotlights and says ‘hello’ she’s like your next door neighbour, although probably prettier and a great deal more musically talented, something she proved immediately by singing The Playing Of Ball. As usual with a Kate Rusby Band gig, there was a lot of talking, joking and laughing going on. It’s often said that if the performers are having fun the audience probably will as well, and it held out here. The band were enjoying themselves, we were laughing and smiling and tapping our feet, and singing the chorus in appropriate places.

There were a few new songs in the set, including the excellent Awkward Annie and another one which did have a title but which has slipped my mind. This bodes well for the new album, and since Kate mentioned that they had been in the studio between tour dates, it seems likely that we might not have to wait much longer for the followup to 2005’s The Girl Who Couldn’t Fly.

Various favourites of mine were also included — Mary Blaize, The Elfin Knight, Sir Eglamore, Underneath the Stars and Cruel among others. I should admit that there are very few songs Kate can sing live which I won’t like to listen to. In many ways, she’s better live than on recordings, as the atmosphere created by the band is a considerable addition to the performance and there’s just no way for that to come across on a CD.

I can’t write as exhaustively about this as I did about Loreena McKennitt — good though Kate Rusby is, she’s not in the same league as Ms McKennitt by a long way. That’s an extremely select club, but it has by no means diminished my enjoyment of a smaller and much more fun performance. Kate Rusby Band: well worth seeing.

Wednesday, 4th April 2007

Loreena McKennitt at the Barbican Centre, London

Filed under: Music — MaW @ 13:05

I wrote this probably slightly over-enthusiastic review of the concert on the train earlier. What else, after all, is one to do on a train when one is alone and some idiot with a PSP is misusing its pathetic speakers to treat the entire carriage to some really bad hip-hop? So I stuck my trusty Shure E2cs in my ears, put some Loreena McKennitt on (surprise) and wrote away.

Anticipation couldn’t really be anything but high for Loreena McKennitt’s first tour in nine years. Intended to promote her superb new album An Ancient Muse, the concert at London’s Barbican Hall was the only UK date and was sold out.

The Barbican Centre is a very impressive building. On the outside it looks like an ugly concrete monstrosity, but inside it’s extremely well done with a simple aesthetic and an audacity of scale which is bound to impress. It’s big. Within the centre there appear to be four cinemas, a theatre and the hall itself, and there’s no sense that anything was squeezed in. The bar outside the hall stalls doors is huge, and interval drinks involved much less than the usual horrendous queues.

Of course, it’s something to be impressed by the venue, but something else to be impressed by the performance. Upon entering the stalls to take my seat which was conveniently located half-way up the tiered section of the stalls at the end of a row, the first thing that caught my eye was the stage, which was set with a large array of musical instruments, a golden arch and a backdrop lit in blue which perfectly evoked the blue and gold tent depicted upon the cover of An Ancient Muse and indeed the concert programme. A lot of people seemed to stop and gaze at it for a moment before finding their seats — it was a truly impressive sight.

The seats themselves aren’t the folding kind one usually expects in a concert hall, and were well padded if a little low for my excessively-long legs to be entirely comfortable with. There was, however, ample leg room and my deliberate choosing of an end-row seat was unnecessary — I would have been perfectly comfortable in the middle.

The hall being extremely tall and steeply tiered especially in the circle, it seemed like everyone would have a good view, but from where I was I think I had one of the best views in the house. Not too far off-centre, and a good height and distance from the stage that I could still see everything clearly.

Seats filled rapidly as half past seven approached. The waiting was made easier by the programme, given out for free and containing a great deal of writing about the process of touring, the ethics of flash photography and the cult of celebrity, something which Ms McKennitt feels very strongly about especially given the legal action she was forced to take in the UK after the publication of a book falsely claiming to be by an intimate friend about her private life.

Ultimately the impression gained from the programme is that each concert is viewed as a private gathering of friends — not close friends, but people with a common bond, come to share in a few hours of music and experience. This impression was bourne out by the concert itself.

Finally the time came and the musicians appeared, followed by Loreena McKennitt herself to wild applause. She sat at her harp and the band immediately launched into a new and rather unusual arrangement of She Moved Through The Fair, which those of us who own her first album Elemental thought we knew. This version was quite different, but then she did record the version we’re familiar with quite a few years ago now.

This was blended seamlessly into The Gates Of Istanbul with Ms McKennitt switching to keyboards, and huge applause filled the hall as the song came to an end.

Then one of my favourite songs, The Mummer’s Dance, requiring Ms McKennitt to change instruments again, to the accordion this time. It was in this song that the hurdy gurdy player — Ben Grossman — got an opportunity to shine, but I cannot stress enough the sheer amount of musical talent which was assembled on the stage that night. I single out the hurdy gurdy only because it’s an instrument I’m rather fond of, and it was fascinating to hear one played live.

The end of this song brought even more applause, and it was after sitting at the piano that Ms McKennitt first addressed the audience. She appears rather less confident talking than she does singing, but nobody could hold it against her. Penelope’s Song was the next to be sung, followed by the instrumental Marco Polo where each of the musicians near the front had a chance to show off in a solo section, the spotlights picking each one out as we were passed from violin to guitar to cello to hurdy gurdy, with a driving beat from the three percussionists at the back binding everything together. As each piece ended, the applause seemed to increase.

Late arrivals came in between almost every piece, and soon I couldn’t see an empty seat anywhere in the stalls. It’s the first sold out performance I’ve been to where it seemed everybody had actually turned up, and given the historical frequency of Ms McKennitt’s UK concerts, I would also have done everything I could to ensure that I didn’t miss it. Who knows how long it will be before we can see her again?

The next song took a darker tone, The Highwayman being a long ballad which ends badly for two lovers, based on a poem by Keats. Dante’s Prayer, which was explained to have been inspired by reading Dante while travelling by train through Siberia in December, was followed by The Bonny Swans, a traditional song which seems to be made up of bits of at least two other songs. Although the story fits together, the daughter who the song is about starts off as the daughter of a farmer who has two sisters, and ends up the daughter of the King with two brothers and one sister. There are many other variants of this song, performed by many artists including Jim Moray, who calls it Two Sisters, and Pentangle, who call it Cruel Sister. Each version is different but the story is essentially the same. A sister, jealous of her (usually younger) sister for some reason (often because someone highly desirable is courting her), pushes her into the river or the sea and leaves her to drown. Her body is eventually washed up near a minstrel (or two minstrels) who for some unknown reason constructs a harp from her breastbone and strings it with her golden hair. He takes this harp to the King’s court, which by this point in the song is described as the hall of her father, and the harp then plays itself, a story of sorrow and woe and the betrayal of a sister.

Fortunately the song which finished the first half, Caravanserai, is a superb piece and rather happier.

The interval seemed short, but nobody minded as, armed with full drinks, we returned to our seats for the second half which opened with a song not on the programme which I had never heard before, so I have no idea of the title. It was good, and I’m wondering how much material she’s already got for the next album.

I remember going to job interviews after I graduated with my BSc and listening to The Mystic’s Dream on the way. It’s a fantastic song, and was performed next in a different arrangement. It had to be different of course, she’s got a differet set of musicians and the album version includes a male voice choir on backing vocals and they of course were not present. Santiago, a tune using the voice as an instrument (the words consist entirely of ‘na’, ‘la’ and ‘da’), was extremely well received, played utterly perfectly and with great energy. It again offered most of the musicians a solo opportunity which they took with relish. Caroline Ravelle on cello plays everything with the appearance of great passion and energy, her long hair flying as she pulls and pushes the bow across the strings, sometimes striking them with shocking amounts of force. Hugh Marsh is no gentler with his violin, and they both displayed astonishing virtuosity.

It would not be right to continue without also mentioning Brian Hughes, playing guitars, celtic bouzouki and oud, who demonstrated irrefutably that the electric guitar solo does have a place outside rock music. The applause after Santiago was thunderous, and we still had Bonny Portmore, Beneath a Phrygian Sky, Kecharitomene (featuring more overwhelming instrumental virtuosity), The Lady of Shallott, The Old Ways and Never-Ending Road (Amhrán Duit) to go before the set was over.

I won’t bore you talking about each song. By this point emotions were running very highly, and I went from noticing details to revelling in the experience and the atmosphere which was being so expertly crafted by those on stage.

A standing ovation was obviously called for, and we clapped until our arms hurt and then clapped some more and were rewarded with an encore — a staggeringly good new arrangement of Huron ‘Beltane’ Fire Dance, another one of Ms McKennitt’s earlier songs, this time from the second album Parallel Dreams. This was actually the first time she’d played the harp all the way through a piece, and it was nice to hear it unfettered although the other instruments on this piece tend to overwhelm it a little.

Not the harp’s fault of course, it’s not the sort of instrument which can easily stand up to an electric guitar, a violin, a cello, a hurdy gurdy, an accordion, a lyre and a big pile of drums all at once.

Another standing ovation followed and, fortunately, a second encore. “We’ll leave the last word to Shakespeare,” Ms McKennitt says, exactly as she does on the live album Live In Paris And Toronto, before playing Cymbeline, the words of which were indeed written by Shakespeare. This was a quiet, intimate moment, with only harp, acoustic guitar and lyre on stage and playing. The house lights came up after the third standing ovation, and it was regretfully time to leave.

Truly this was a concert given by a supremely talented set of musicians. Groups like Flook and Lúnasa will light up a venue and fill it with sound and energy and carry the audience through a field of incredible rhythms. Steeleye Span will come out on stage and have a jolly good time, while Karine Polwart and her band make you feel like you’re having a private party. Loreena McKennitt takes her audience somewhere else entirely, and it’s not the sort of experience you should miss out on.

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