We had a great evening at the Re Nua Artistic Alliance Winter Show last night. This was held in the beautiful Grain Store at Ballymaloe. I was asked to arrange music for 8 cellos to accompany the band Interference. The cello girls (plus Bertrand Galen who plays cello with Interference) looked and sounded gorgeous and we even enjoyed jamming along with one of the songs, all 8 of us!
A welcome rock was erected at the entrance to the small East Cork Town of Carrigtwohill, and to celebrate, Tina Horan choreographed a dance for the lovely Eadin to my air Inch Strand. It was a beautiful setting sun. Later in the evening the community came together for the official unveiling with the local boys school choir, speeches, cups of tea, the dance, and little girls running around the rock to me playing a couple of reels….
Music and dance performance. Cello by Ilse de Ziah. Original music ‘Inch Strand’ by Ilse de Ziah. Dancer: Eadin O’Mahony. Choreography by Tina Horan. Filmed and edited by Barry McCarthy.
I played for the Hope foundation charity concert last week. Some beautiful singing from the choirs and raised a decent amount for the street children of Calcutta despite the horror weather on that dark night!! Here is a little of Carrickfergus…
If you would like to have a look at what Hope do and donate to this very worthy cause, please do go to hopefoundation
Award-winning Choirs for HOPE
The Holy Trinity Capuchin Church on Fr Mathew Quay in the heart of Cork City will provide a spectacular venue for the upcoming charity concert in aid of The Hope Foundation on Thursday November 17th at 8.15 pm.
Some of East Cork’s top musical talent comes together on the night to present an uplifting program of music in the heavenly acoustics of Holy Trinity.
Top of the billing is Cantemus, directed by Tomás Ó Tuama and awarded National Choir of The Year and winner of The Sacred Music Competition at the Navan Choral Festival in 2011. Cantemus is a chamber choir with a wide ranging repertoire from early Christian to contemporary.
Ilse De Ziah will be performing a selection of pieces on solo cello. Ilse is a Baroque and folk musician, and composer. She is currently leader of the cellist section of Cork Symphony Orchestra.
The Kiltha Tones, a male voice choir directed by Ursula Muckley, will add to the eclectic nature of the evening with music from around the world.
Castlemartyr Choir, directed by Tómas Ó Tuama will open the concert. This choir is no stranger to Holy Trinity. It won The Sacred Music Competition here at Feis Maitiú in 2011.
Enjoy a great evening of choral and baroque music in a beautiful, spiritual and acoustic venue while helping a really worthy cause. Doors open at 8pm. Tickets €15 at the door or available from Hope Foundation at 021 429 2990 office@hopefoundation.ie
See more details at:
www.choirsforhope.org
A wonderful concert with my trio OzmoSis last night at The Grain Store. We performed The Big Dry by my sister Elisabeth Kelvin, who is also an outstanding artist.
During the performance of Dido and Aeneas at the Cork Opera House, Daniel O'Connell came and filmed us on set. We are playing the Overture and our habanera version of 'But ere we this Perform' from Purcell's Dido and Aeneas.
Carolyn Goodwin clarinet and sax, Piia Pakrinen accordion, Marja Gaynor violin and Ilse de Ziah cello
Great interview in the Irish Examiner today for the upcoming Dido and Aeneas. Having fun rehearsing and being actors on stage. Getting comfortable and excited by actually being part of the story and not just in the pit, unseen…
Bewitched by her love
Friday, September 09, 2011 : Fear and mistrust push Dido to reject Aeneas’s love in a version that utilises the musicians as actors, says Nicki Ffrench Davis.
WITH opera back on the Cork Opera House autumn-winter programme, a successful in-house show first produced in the spring returns. An exciting version of Purcell’s small but perfectly-formed Dido and Aeneas benefits from a musical re-imagining and a deft psychological re-appraisal. It is the brainchild of conductor John O’Brien.
With each of the four singers playing at least two parts, the characters become more complex and the story becomes universal. "I had done a version of Dido a few years ago," says O’Brien, "and I noticed how Dido and the Sorceress could be seen as two sides of the same person, with the Sorceress as Dido’s alter-ego. It makes the whole story quite Freudian; she sabotages her own happiness. It’s about a woman who has come out of a loving relationship, her husband has died and she is feeling guilty, and then, suddenly, this hot young thing arrives on the scene but she doesn’t trust his love. She pushes him too far, too soon, and kills it — the same way that so many people sabotage their own relationships." Paring the cast of singers down to four and doing away with the chorus, he took no chances with his singers, making sure he had the best. Securing the voice of Cork-born international soprano Cara O’Sullivan for the lead role, his selection of coloratura soprano Mary Hegarty, Swedish soprano Caitrin Johnsson and tenor Simon Morgan shows a judicious appreciation of the fine musicality and drama skills opera requires. O’Brien brought in Marja Gaynor, a baroque violinist who also plays folk and rock music, to work on a new arrangement of the 300-year-old, one-hour opera. "It’s a baroque score, so even though it is written, there is a lot more freedom than in later music," says Gaynor. Much of the music in Baroque scores is partially improvised and Gaynor extends this freedom to her choice of instruments, as would have been natural when it was written. The organ and harpsichord parts are played by an accordion, and Gaynor jumped at the opportunity to bring the talent of her compatriot Piia Pakarinen, from Finland, to perform. Joining them is Carolyn Goodwin, an accomplished Cork musician, on soprano and tenor saxophones as well as clarinet and bass clarinet. Completing the instrumental line-up is cellist Ilse de Ziah, a gutsy improviser who also performs in a range of styles. With new instrument colours, the opera takes on folk flavours, including tango and habanera. O’Brien adds to the numbers on stage by making the musicians a key part of the drama. "I had done shows in Canada with performers who are each actors, singers and musicians. Those shows were more musical theatre and cabaret, but I found working with the dynamics of a group who could do all three — act, sing and play an instrument — a really cool thing, and I wanted to see how it would work in the context of opera. I knew that we have some musicians who are great performers and natural on stage," he says. "We really struck gold with the band," says Gaynor. "When John explained what he wanted, my first thought was ‘I don’t want to say anything and I don’t want to do anything embarrassing’. It was a massive task to memorise the whole score, but now we know it we can play so well together it makes it very enjoyable. "For all four of us, I think it has developed a new side to us as musicians. What we were taught as students was to stand still and not move too much — this has given us new attention to how we perform, right down to how we pick up our instruments." To realise the dream, O’Brien joined forces with choreographer Inma Moya Pavon. "I thought we could explore the physicality of playing the instruments," he says, "and from my previous experience in Canada I understood the rehearsal process of how to make it happen. "Inma’s so subtle in how she does things that I think the actors don’t realise how she breaks down subconsciously what they’re doing. It’s not about putting on a facade. I wanted the audience to see an amplification of what people who are playing feel when they’re really into it. "Lisa Zagone’s sexy and edgy costumes are part of that too — opera is about people screaming their emotions, it is about showing what someone feels. Opera is about extremes, like science fiction or fantasy," he says. Dido & Aeneas runs at Cork Opera House Sept 15-17. here is the quartet of musicians and clips from the Spring run
Here is a sweet version of my arrangement of Aisling An Oigfhir on the Mandocello that someone put up as a video response. Good to see another instrument taking it on!
Played with the Cork Symphony Orchestra cellos for Brid's wedding. I arranged/composed this piece putting a piece from Mayo and one form Donegal together (where they hail from…) with a bit of rocking out at the end. We also played my arrangement of 7 nation army by white stripes and some Apocalyptica covers like Nothing Else Matters and Creeping Death. All in our gowns… Brid playing in her wedding dress was particularly challenging!
My brother in law John Plankenhorn is a composer living in Australia, and my trio Ozmosis comissioned a piece from him. He wrote meanwhile… as a series of six vignettes to be placed between pieces in the concert, like a little aside… they were very tricky to rehearse although most under a minute… have a listen!
Beautiful concert at the Cork School of music last night, Rachel Podger on Baroque violin, Pamela Thorby on recorders with Malcolm Proud harpsichord. Rachel's violin playing is sublime. The smooth sound from her exquisitely controlled bow was wonderful to hear. The highlight was her rendition of Sonata No. 3 in E by J. S. Bach It's all in the bow, and keeping all the joints in the arm supple. Her arm was fluid and the sound was fluid. Flexible means you can change direction, speed, texture at any moment and can react to any musical impulse. Rachel says:
"If you're going to get anywhere in this business, you've got to have something special to sell, but if that's not the music, then I'm not interested."