Arvo Pärt and Calvin Bowman (2015)

Saturday, 9 May 2015, 5.30pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Road, Kew
Subscription Concert 2

Please note the earlier start time during the colder months

One of the highlights of Ensemble Gombert’s performance history was the first Australian performance of Arvo Pärt’s Kanon pokajanen in 2005. Here we re-visit sections of the work, flanked by earlier and later pieces of Pärt. Another highlight was the 2008 program including the world première performances of Calvin Bowman’s Holy Sonnets of John Donne which was composed for us. The sonnet cycle was subsequently renamed Death, be not proud, being the last of the four selected sonnets. We also acknowledge the significant anniversary of World War I with the performance of Beach Burial, set to text by Australian poet Kenneth Slessor. In this program these works are separated by the beautiful settings of Herrick that first endeared us to Bowman’s choral writing.

Program
Arvo Pärt Nunc Dimittis
Sieben Magnificat-Antiphonenen
Kanon pokajanen (
excerpts)
Calvin Bowman Beach Burial
To Daffadils
Death, be not proud

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katharina Hochheiser
Victoria Brown
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Sarah Harris
Alto
Belinda Wong
Juliana Kay
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim Van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Michael Stephens
Bass
Andrew Murray
Nicholas Tolhurst
Michael Strasser
Mike Ormerod
Andrew Fysh

High Renaissance Polyphony (2015)

Saturday, 7 March 2015, 8pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Road, Kew

Subscription Concert 1

 


Antoine Brumel Laudate Dominum in caelis
Josquin Desprez Huc me sydero descendere jussit Olympo
Jacob Obrecht Laudemus nunc Dominum
Philippe Verdelot Sancta Maria succurre
Nicolas Gombert Missa Sancta Maria succurre
Kyrie – Gloria
Jean Richafort Miseremini mei
Nicolas Gombert Missa Sancta Maria succurre
C
redo
Clemens non Papa Ego flos campi
Nicolas Gombert Missa Sancta Maria succurre
Sanctus – Benedictus
Cristobal de Morales Lamentabatur Jacob
Nicolas Gombert Missa Sancta Maria succurre
Agnus Dei
Jachet da Mantua Dum vastos Adriae
Cotanzo Festa Ave Regina caelorum

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katharina Hochheiser
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Juliana Kay
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Jane Schleiger
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim Van Nooten
Matthew Thomson
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Thomas Baldwin
Chris Potter
Mike Ormerod
Michael Strasser

 

REVIEW

Sunday, 8 March 2015, The Age [Melbourne], np
Ensemble Gombert review: Choral chords triumph amid rich Renaissance tapestry
Clive O’Connell

HIGH RENAISSANCE POLYPHONY     ****
Ensemble Gombert
Xavier College Chapel, March 7

High indeed. In an unusually solid program, a feat of concentration even for this expert body, John O’Donnell and his singers unveiled Renaissance music that few of us would (or could) have heard in live performance.
Ensemble Gombert – Melbourne Early Music chamber choir, with director John O’Donnell.

Nine motets surrounded the various parts of Nicolas Gombert’s strikingly expressive Mass, Sancta Maria succurre; the night’s framework offering a study of contrasts between the rigour of substantial works by Brumel, Verdelot and Richafort and the relative sumptuousness of Festa’s Ave Regina caelorum and Clemens non Papa’s lustrous Ego flos campi setting: musical and textual metaphors and similes sustained in fine balance.

The sheer physical labour started to tell towards the recital’s midway point; Gombert’s closely interwoven lines for the creed testing the singers in the final paragraphs where the declarations of faith blend into each other.

The choral fabric becomes a thick tapestry where the top-line sopranos have the dominant colour while the lower parts move fleetingly in and out of focus. The effect comes close to numbing your capacity to rationalise the score’s progress but the Gomberts forged through this and other taut segments with dedication and accuracy.

During the opening items, you could have asked for a less nasal timbre from the basses, but this quartet was well sung-in by the time Morales’ familiar Lamentabatur Jaco arrived: a highlight of colour, despite a dodgy opening from the first tenors.

But as an opening to the group’s annual series, Saturday night substantiated its reputation for scholarship, technical ability and certainty of direction.

Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Music for a King (2015)

Sunday, 18 January 2015, 8 pm
St Patrick’s Cathedral, Ballarat

Organs of the Ballarat Goldfields Festival
Celebrating the conclusion of the Twentieth Organs of the Ballarat Goldfields Festival

PROGRAM

Georg Frederic Handel Music for the Royal Fireworks and Coronation Anthems

SOPRANO ALTO TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Belinda Wong Tim Van Nooten Thomas Bland
Katherine Lieschke Yi Wen Chin Peter Campbell Joshua McLeod
Katharina Hochheiser Rachel Martin Vaughan McAlley Thomas Bell
Michelle Clark Niki Ebacioni Stuart Tennant Michael Strasser
Claerwen Jones Miranda Gronow Michael Stephens Mike Ormerod
Sarah Harris Christopher Roache
Maria Pisani
Kathryn Pisani

 

Accademia Arcadia – conducted by John O’Donnell.

REVIEW

Monday, 19 January 2015, The Age [Melbourne], np
Organs of the Ballarat Goldfields review: J. S. Bach Trio Sonatas and Music For a King
Clive O’Connell

MUSICJ. S. BACH TRIO SONATAS ★★Trio Sine Nomine St Andrew’s Church, Ballarat January 18
MUSIC FOR A KING ★★★Ensemble Gombert and Accademia Arcadia St Patrick’s Cathedral January 18

Adaptation was the prime resource for a rather ad hoc ensemble that presented the last recital in Ballarat’s annual serious music festival.Trio Sine Nomine comprises a mixed bag of instruments – oboe Gianfranco Bortolato, violin Claudia Lopez Gomez, harpsichord Michele Benuzzi – for which combination the repertoire is not large.The field of play is made more uneven in that neither melody line involves period instruments, although the string contribution here showed plenty of detachment.In two recitals, these musicians played arrangements of Bach’s six Trio Sonatas, very familiar to organists as technical test-pieces, particularly for their active pedal parts. Yet, in Sunday afternoon’s exercise, the D minor Sonata was arranged for oboe and harpsichord; the fifth sonata in C saw Gomez and Benuzzi as duet interpreters.   The actual trio formation appeared only in the last sonata of the set, BWV 530 in G Major which brought about the afternoon’s most colourful textures, although the performance standard left much to be desired.   Bortolato’s oboe made a forthright contribution to the composer’s supple, mobile constructs, but the keyboard support showed less authority, Benuzzi forcing the pace in the outer movements and occasionally far from confident in figuration work.Gomez gave little away, content to produce a remote, passionless sound in her duet, if showing more flair in the actual trio combination. But you looked in vain for a consistent collegiality; Bortolato kept one’s interest through a well-shaped upper part but he had to work hard for his successes.
Handel took pride of place in the concluding concert, an expanded Ensemble Gombert conducted by artistic director John O’Donnell with the support of Jacqueline Ogeil’s well-populated Accademia Arcadia. In the Royal Fireworks Music, the string nonet and woodwind quartet made a high-quality combination of sound-colours, largely indebted to the reliable efficiency of oboes Kirsten Barry and Owen Watkins. Both horn and trumpet trios had their moments; these were often hard to find in the substantial Overture, though the concluding Minuets made for easier listening. Arwen Johnston’s timpani gave a distractingly obtrusive contribution to the mix and O’Donnell observed every possible repeat.
The following readings of all four Coronation Anthems generated more continuous satisfaction, despite some dynamic imbalances. The singers produced buoyant and energetic accounts of the more declamatory, heroic strophes of each piece; O’Donnell avoided the crescendo cliche of the opening ritornello to Zadok the Priest, so that the choral explosion came over with unexpected force.The less-popular My heart is inditing moved with exemplary clarity from the opening dialogue between solo groups and full choir to the jubilant trumpet-reinforced finale, a realisation packed with light and staid vivacity. But for this listener the evening’s most effective pages came in the second part of The king shall rejoice where the vocal and instrumental balance came close to ideal as oboes, violins and choir generated a simple web or fabric around the Exceeding glad shall he be text; simple in its elements but, as in the best performances, speaking with inspired assurance to the most hardened republican.

Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age