Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Trio session pics
Lawrence
Lawrence & Simon
Simon
Someone thought it would be a good idea to switch instruments around for a while. It sounded suprisingly good actually.
Although Matthew still hasn't learnt the viola clef...
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Conchord ask the questions...
Maya: What is your favourite city (after St Petersburg of course)?
Julian: Vienna
Emily: Spoleto, Italy (where I played two Russian operas, Eugene Onegin and War and Peace)
Maya: Paris (surprise surprise!)
Emily: What is your favourite Russian piece of music? (aside from Balakirev, of course:-)
Daniel: Eugene Onegin, Tschaikovsky. Devastating and perfect!
Julian: So many…but Evgeny Onegin is probably the piece I would take to a desert island
Maya: Glazunov String Quintet is certainly one of them. Rachmaninov 2nd piano concerto (with Rachmaninov). Tchaikovsky 5 (Happy Philharmonia memories with Muti). Stravinsky Firebird. Balakirev Islamey. Glazunov Violin Concerto (Milstein). And so many more!
Maya: What was your most memorable experience of this recording?
Julian: Looking at the night sky above Potton Hall!
Emily: Other than the recording of course(!) jumping on Jeremy Hayes' trampoline in recording breaks
Maya: Jeremy Hayes keeping a smile on his face after 11 hours of recording in one day... (and everyone else, too, actually!)
Emily: What has been your best seafood experience in Suffolk?
Daniel: lobster and chips, Aldeburgh fish and chip shop
Julian: The Butley Oysterage at Orford
Emily: Do they play wooden flutes in St Petersburg?
Daniel: Balakirev Octet would certainly have been played on a wood flute. So I will be helping to recreate original 19th century Russian sound!
Maya: Really???! I had no idea!
Maya: How long did it take you to read Crime and Punishment (718 pages..)?
Julian: Several months – the book is connected in my mind with a neighbour playing Mahler 10 over and over again at top volume, creating an unforgettable mixture of Austrian and Russian angst...
Emily: I'm embarrassed to say that have not read Crime and Punishment (yet), but have read War and Peace, which took about 6 weeks...
Emily: What is your favourite flavour of the Russian dumplings I make on Christmas eve? (a leftover of my Ukrainian heritage!)
Daniel: sauerkraut and mushroom
Maya: Have you ever seen more stars than in the Potton Hall sky?
Julian: No
Emily: I have only seen more stars in my homeland of Minnesota, where I've seen the Northern Lights.=
Monday, November 30, 2009
BBC Choice for Korngold
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Gilchrist Gramophone Editor's choice
Sunday, October 25, 2009
The pitfalls of live recording
"Live recording is always an unknown quantity as there are so many potential pitfalls. Apart from the obvious musical considerations there are the problems of extraneous noise from the audience and technical issues. These days equipment and techniques are very reliable but there is always scope for something to go wrong; we are human after all!
I remember attending a performance of Liszt’s ‘Christus’ in Westminster Cathedral many years ago, as a member of the audience. Seconds before the live transmission started the sling wire holding the main microphone across and over the audience became detached and the microphone fell stopping just short of their heads - I’ve never seen engineers move so fast! Thankfully Health and Safety and better techniques prevent such occurrences these days!
No such problems in Symphony Hall, Birmingham, though, certainly one of the world’s greatest concert halls and a very rewarding place to work. The hall ‘takes no prisoners’ though as the acoustic is ruthlessly analytical and the silences are truly silent!
Bach’s St Matthew also presents its own challenges. It is a very ‘bitty’ work with many short recitatives and choruses using different styles and forces. The performers are divided into two distinct groups left and right, Chori I and II, which are a virtual mirror image of each other. Then there are many small solos which are usually sung by chorus members from different areas of the stage, as well as obbligato instrumental solos played from within the orchestra. In addition there are large-scale arias from nine soloists and the whole work is unified by the role of the Evangelist, a solo tenor who tells the story of Christ’s Passion in recitatives. So in many ways it is a very ‘operatic’ work. It is also a profound dramatic, musical and spiritual journey, and a live performance gives the unfolding architecture an emotional depth that is very difficult to achieve in the sterile environment of the recording studio. This is what makes for such a rewarding experience."
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Conchord Session Pics
(photos: Patrick Allen, www.operaomnia.co.uk)
Julian Milford and Maximiliano Martin
Andrea, Maya, Tom and Joel (in serious mode)
Joel Waterman
Gemma Rosefield
Thomas Carroll
Tom, Andrea, Gemma, Ning, Maya and Joel
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Ex Cathedra pics
Gilchrist CD of the Month
BBC Music Magazine declared 'In a highly competitive field of ever more thought-provoking recordings of Die schöne Müllerin, this latest one is worthy to stand with the best.'
Matthew Trusler Blog
Recording in Dusseldorf was a fantastic, if fairly stressful experience. We had flown over Patrick the engineer, Jeremy the producer, Yasuo the conductor and me the violinist, so there was a constant sense that if any one of us ate an unfriendly shrimp, or became ill by any other means, the whole thing would fall apart like a house of cards. By some miracle nobody did, and the week went by pretty smoothly.
As you can see from the photo below, the recording box in the Tonhalle was about half a mile up in the sky, and climbing what seemed like several thousand stairs in between takes to see if we liked what we'd just played lost its novelty very quickly indeed. The sound was wonderful in there though, a really memorable place to make a record.
Dusseldorf itself is a very interesting place to spend a few days- hundreds of Japanese restaurants to feed the massive Japanese community there, and, of course, the Schumann connection. Schumann was Music Director at the orchestra, and threw himself in the river in fact. Producer Jeremy disappeared off on a Schumann pilgrimage during a morning off, but opted not to follow in the great man's footsteps by having a swim in the river.
The pieces- Rozsa and Korngold- are two of my very favourite concertos. Both terribly difficult but great fun to play. I just wish Heifetz hadn't recorded them...
The view from the recording box
(photo: Patrick Allen)