The
Gesualdo Six, The Giovanni Consort, Voyces and William Barton
Winthrop
Hall
14
Feb, 2020
When
Marin Mersenne, the father of acoustics, observed the similarity between the
popular instrument of the 17th century, the viola de gamba, and les voix humaines, the comparison
implicitly recognised that the human voice was the greatest of all musical
instruments.
No
other has its combination of range and tonal subtlety; no other has its
emotional force. No other has tongues to speak.
All
those qualities were in full display in UWA’s Winthrop Hall when the visiting
Gesualdo Six joined two Perth choirs and the distinguished Kalkadunga performer
William Barton in a concert of sublime musicianship and generosity.
The
Six, countertenor Guy Williams, tenors Joseph Wicks and Josh Cooter, baritone
Michael Craddock, bass Samuel Mitchell and bass and leader Owain Park performed alone an
exemplary repertoire of ancient choral pieces from Thomas Tallis, William Byrd
and Nicholas Gombert, with more recent work by Francis Poulenc and Max Reger,
that would have left any lovers of precise harmony and meditative musicology
more than satisfied.
They
also gave impressive readings of contemporary work, by Cheryl Francies-Hoad,
the Canadian composer Gerda Blok-Wilson, and, in an early highlight of the
concert, David Bednall’s beautifully-formed telling of the “fishers of men”
story, Put out into the deep.
But
it was the introduction of our own choirs, The Giovanni Consort and Voyces that
extended the performance’s opportunities and took it to new levels of
excitement.
The
choirs showed they could go toe-to-toe with international ensembles, and there
was considerable delighted pride evident in the audience at the quality of
their work.
The combined choirs excelled in some often very technically
demanding ensemble work, beginning
with interesting pieces by Alison Wills where the voices created the sound of
wind in the wires as a storm gathered. It continued with a work by the Gesualdo Six's own Owain Park, and
Benjamin Britten’s A Hymn
to the Virgin
A highlight was a Perth Festival commission, the intricate, almost
subliminal, 40-part Ode to Ode by the
WA composer Cara Zydor Fesjian – the Gesualdo Six plan to include in their
repertoire.
And the combined choirs featured in the evening’s two highest points.
And the combined choirs featured in the evening’s two highest points.
The
first was a triumphant Tallis’s Spem in
allium, the first time the Gesualdo Six had attempted perhaps the greatest
achievement of English vocal music.
And
towering over all that had come before was an electrifying performance of William Barton’s Kalkadunga Yurdu, with the combined choirs,
conducted by Hugh Lydon, reaching enormous heights with Barton’s singing and
didgeridoo playing.
The performance was introduced by choir members singing in overtone, the vocal technique that is the basis
of didgeridoo playing. Barton
transfixed the audience from the instant his disembodied voice was first heard
before he entered the hall to the pulsating climax of the piece with the choirs
in full voice behind him.
For
me this moment brought together the elements of an ecstatic week, as Perth Festival director Iain Grandage stood
collaboration, indigenous culture and performance front and centre in the spotlight.
I
have seen and heard many unforgettable things in the grand old Winthrop Hall,
right back to the Indian maestros Ravi Shankar and Ali Akbar Khan in 1972, but
I have never seen its audience erupt like it did at the conclusion of Barton’s
piece.
The pestilence has brought us few pleasures, but one is the decision of ABC Classic FM to extend the life of many of their recorded concerts, including this one. Link here for the whole, exquisite experience!
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