Music For Pentecost (2022)

Sunday 22th May 2022, 3pm
All Saints’ Church, East St Kilda

All Saints’ Church Concert Series 2022

PROGRAM
Orlando de Lassus
Christus resurgens
Huc me sydereo descendere jussit Olympo
Surrexit pastor bonus
Magnificat super “Praeter rerum seriem”

Johann Sebastian Bach
Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf (BWV 226)
William Henry Harris
Faire is the heaven
Arvo Pärt
7 Magnificat-Antiphonen

SOPRANO
Carol Veldohen; Victoria Brown; Katherine Lieschke; Claerwen Jones; Nina Pereira; Sarah Harris; Deborah Summerbell
ALTO
Helena Ekins; Stephanie Mitchell; Leonie Tonkin; Katie Richardson; Emma Warburton
TENOR
Peter Campbell; Tim Van Nooten; Abhishek Purty; Vaughan McAlley; Michael Stephens
BASS
Chetan Anthony Noronha; Nicholas Tolhurst; Mike Ormerod; Mark Thawley; Andrew Murray



Lassus & Palestrina (2022)

Monday, 4 April 2022, 7:30pm
Elisabeth Murdoch Hall, Melbourne Recital Centre
Presented by Melbourne Recital Centre & Ensemble Gombert

PROGRAM
Orlande de Lassus
Omnes de Saba, LV 973
Magnificat secundi toni, LV 1070
Magnificat super carmen praeter rerum seriem, LV 1070
Tristis est anima mea, LV 238

Il magnanimo Pietro
Nunc dimittis primi toni, LV Anh.111

Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Missa ‘Assumpta est Maria’

SOPRANO
Carol Veldhoven; Victoria Brown; Katherine Lieschke; Claerwen Jones; Nina Pereira; Sarah Harris; Deborah Summerbell; Fiona Seers
ALTO
Helena Ekins; Miranda Gronow; Leonie Tonkin; Emma Warburton
TENOR
Peter Campell; Vaughan McAlley; Michael Stephens; Abhishek Purty; Christopher Watson
BASS
Chetan Anthony Noronha; Nicholas Tolhurst; Mike Ormerod; Mark Thawley; Andrew Murray

Anniversaries (2021)

Saturday, 10 July 2021, 2:30pm
Sunday, 11 July 2021, 5:30pm
St Ambrose Church, Woodend

Woodend Winter Arts Festival

Igor Stravinsky Pater noster
Josquin des Prez
Illibata Dei virgo
Huc me sydereo
O virgo prudentissima
Michael Praetorius  Jesaia dem Propheten das geschah
Ralph Vaughan Williams Mass in G minor (1921)

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell; Carol Veldhoven; Nina Pereira; Katherine Lieschke*;
Victoria Brown; Elizabeth O’Leary; Katharina Hochheiser; Claerwen Jones
Alto
Emma Warburton*, Yi Wen Chin;
Helena Ekins; Gowri Rajendran
Alto/Tenor
Peter Campbell; Abhishek Purty
Tenor
Tim van Nooten*; Vaughan McAlley; Stuart Tennant; Michael Stephens
Bass
Andrew Murray*; Chetan Noronha; Nicholas Tolhurst;
Thomas Bell; Mike Ormerod; Mark Thawley

*Soloists in the Mass in G Minor 

Josquin des Prez, Prince of Music (2021)

Wednesday, 5 May 2021, 6:30pm
Melbourne Recital Centre – Elisabeth Murdoch Hall
Josquin des Pres, Prince of Music
Melbourne Recital Centre Local Heroes Series 2021

This year marks the 500th anniversary of the death of Josquin des Prez, of whom Martin Luther said, ‘Josquin is master of the notes, which must do as he wishes; other composers must do as the notes wish.’ Ensemble Gombert commemorates this ‘Prince of Music’, as he was known in the 16th century, performing six of his greatest motets. Of these, it is no exaggeration to say that Praeter rerum seriem must be one of the most original works of all time, while Miserere mei, Deus is regarded by some as the greatest musical creation of the Renaissance – one commentator claimed it was the musical equivalent of Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling.

Josquin des Prez
Præter rerum seriem
Stabat Mater
Inviolata, integra, et casta es Maria
Salve Regina
Regina caeli laetare
Miserere mei, Deus

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell; Fiona Seers; Nina Pereira; Katherine Lieschke;
Victoria Brown; Katharina Hochheiser; Claerwen Jones
Alto
Emma Warburton, Yi Wen Chin;
Niki Ebacioni; Gowri Rajendran
Alto/Tenor
Peter Campbell; Abhishek Purty
Tenor
Tim van Nooten; Vaughan McAlley; Michael Stephens
Bass
Andrew Murray; Chetan Noronha; Nicholas Tolhurst;
Thomas Bell; Mike Ormerod; Mark Thawley

REVIEW
Thursday, 6 May 2021, Limelight Magazine [online]
Josquin des Prez, Prince of Music (Ensemble Gombert, Melbourne Recital Centre)
Patricia Maunder

4.5 Stars. Ensemble Gombert’s 30th year did not go to plan due to COVID, so this one-off concert was a welcome return to live performance for the renowned Melbourne choir. A celebration of French composer Josquin des Prez, the program of six motets was performed with a fine balance of studied precision and discreet joy by the 22 singers.

Pleasantly more representative of the Australian community than one might expect of a choir specialising in a cappella performance of Franco-Flemish music of the High Renaissance, Ensemble Gombert stepped onto the stage in casual concert black. They began with Praeter rerum seriem, a work that is austere yet suggestive of mystery, starting low and sombre then building into a polyphonic masterpiece. The choir’s five parts passed the melody between them with beautiful fluidity and, as was the case throughout the performance, sang the text with splendid clarity.

The choir’s ever-calm, avuncular director John O’Donnell then took a few moments to address the audience, explaining that this being the 500th year since Josquin’s death is one of few things known about the composer. Among the interesting snippets he revealed was that the ensemble’s namesake, Nicolas Gombert, may have been a student of Josquin.

The contemplative Stabat Mater followed, then Inviolata, integra, et casta es Maria, notable for its dynamic variety and shifting prominence of voice types: the sopranos, clear and bright, often shine in this concert as one would expect, but here altos also have their moments, and tenors and basses are pleasingly showcased. A slight croak among the tenors at a critical moment of Salve Regina was the only blot on the concert copybook, while Regina caeli laetare, which is almost ostentatious by Josquin’s standards, was a flawless, mellifluous delight of interweaving voices.

O’Donnell’s second and final background offering included a little about this one-hour concert’s finale (and the only work not concerned with the Virgin Mary), Miserere mei, Deus. It has been described, he said, as the musical equivalent of Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling, which was also created in the early 16th century. If that put any pressure on the choir to soar to such heavenly heights, they didn’t show it.

The Miserere mei, Deus is a study in simplicity, most notably the repeated titular phrase sung by the tenors who step up and down in pitch. Other voices flowed in and out in a meditative, almost hypnotic display of tonal variety and harmony. Closing my eyes, the music swept me far away to a time and place when those who first heard this work were certain of the divine, and hopeful of their place in an afterlife where the angels would surely sing like this.
Patricia Maunder/Limelight Magazine

 

Requiem Eucharist and Thanksgiving for Belinda Wong-Barker (2021)

Requiem Eucharist and Thanksgiving for the life of Belinda Wong-Barker
Tuesday, 30 March 2021, 2:00pm
St Paul’s Cathedral, Melbourne

Belinda Wong
17 June 1977 – 5 March 2021
1st Alto of Ensemble Gombert 2004-2021
Vice President 2006-2015
President 2015-2021
Chair of 2015 European Tour Committee

The choir leading the music comprised members past and present of Ensemble Gombert, and friends from other choirs with which Belinda sang.
Director – John O’Donnell, Director of Ensemble Gombert and Director of Music, All Saints’ East St Kilda
Organist – Calvin Bowman, Director of Music, St Andrew’s Brighton

Prior to service:
Ralph Vaughan Williams – Hymn Prelude on Rhosymedre
David Brown, Organist, St James’ Old Cathedral
JS Bach – Schmücke dich, o liebe Seele
Calvin Bowman

Introit
Calvin Bowman – To Daffadills
Kyrie
TL de Victoria – Missa pro defunctis a 6
Gradual Hymn
Blest are the pure in heart – English Hymnal 370 alt.
Offertory Motet
Johannes Brahms – Wo ist er ein so herrlich Volk
Sanctus/Benedictus
TL de Victoria – Missa pro defunctis a 6
Music during Communion
TL de Victoria – Agnus Dei, Missa pro defunctis a 6
William Byrd – Justorum animae
Carole King – You’ve Got a Friend (Sung by Sadie Mustoe)
Hymn
Now thank we all our God – New English Hymnal 413
Nunc Dimittis
Gustav Holst – Nunc dimittis
Postlude
JS Bach – Prelude and Fugue in B minor

Soprano
Kristy Biber; Victoria Brown; Helen Gagliano; Katharina Hochheiser; Claerwen Jones; Mandie Lee; Katherine Lieschke; Katherine Norman; Elizabeth O’Leary; Nina Pereira; Kathryn Pisani; Maria Pisani; Jacqueline Porter; Deborah Summerbell; Carol Veldhoven
Alto
Yi Wen Chin; Rebecca Collins; Niki Ebacioni; Helena Ekins; Jennifer Mathers; Jacqueline Ogeil; Gowri Rajendran; Emma Warburton
Tenor
Peter Campbell; Vaughan McAlley; Benjamin Namdarian; Ben Owen; Timothy Reynolds; Michael Stephens; Tim van Nooten; Christopher Watson
Bass
Thomas Bell; Tim Daly; Thomas Drent; Andrew Fysh; Jerzy Kozlowski; Michael Leighton Jones; Oliver Mann; Andrew Murray; Mike Ormerod; Christopher Potter; Michael Strasser; Mark Thawley; Nicholas Tolhurst

All Saints’ Concert: Schütz St John Passion (2021)

Concert
All Saints’ Church Concert Series 2021

Sunday, 28 March 2021, 3:00pm
All Saints’ Church, St Kilda East

Michael Praetorius – Christus der uns selig macht
Heinrich Schütz  – Historia des Leidens und Sterbens unser Herrn und Heilandes Jesu Christi nach dem Evangelisten St. Johannes
[St John Passion / Johannes-Passion]

Today’s performers dedicate this program to the memory of Belinda Wong, who died suddenly and unexpectedly of a burst cerebral aneurysm on 5 March.

Evangelist – Christopher Roache
Soprano
Deborah Summerbell; Katherine Lieschke; Victoria Brown; Claerwen Jones; Katharina Hochheiser
Alto
Helena Ekins; Yi Wen Chin; Emma Warburton
Tenor
Peter Campbell; Tim van Nooten; Michael Stephens; Vaughan McAlley
Bass
Nicholas Tolhurst; Thomas Bell; Andrew Murray; Mike Ormerod; Mark Thawley

 

Christmas Carols by Candlelight (2019)

Sunday, 15 December at 7:30 pm
Montsalvat Artist Colony, Eltham

Resonet in laudibus – Praetorius
The Salutation Carol –  JOD
There is no rose –  Joubert
The Truth from Above
The Lord at first did Adam make – JOD
While shepherds watched – JOD
Jesus Christ the apple tree – Elizabeth Poston
O little town of Bethlehem
Lullay my liking – Gustav Holst
Quaeramus cum pastoribus  – Jean Mouton
Il est né le divin enfant – JOD
O come, all ye faithful
O magnum mysterium  –TL da Victoria
Tomorrow shall be my dancing day
O Tannenbaum –  JOD
God rest you merry, gentlemen
Away in a manger
Stille Nacht – JOD
We wish you a merry Christmas
Hark! The herald angels sing

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell; Carol Veldhoven; Katherine Lieschke; Victoria Brown;
Katharina Hochheiser; Claerwen Jones; Elizabeth O’Leary
Alto
Belinda Wong; Juliana Kay; Yi Wen Chin
Tenor
Peter Campbell; Tim van Nooten;
Vaughan McAlley; Michael Stephens
Bass
Nicholas Tolhurst;  Andrew Murray;
Mike Ormerod; Mark Thawley; Tom Bell

Christmas to Candlemas (2019)

Christmas to Candlemas
Saturday, 7 December 2019, 3:00pm

Our Lady of Victories Basilica
Burke Road, Camberwell

Britten’s A Boy was Born, composed when he was nineteen, rocketed him to national fame when it was first performed on 23 February 1934 as a BBC broadcast. This is our major work for Christmas this year, preceded by five Renaissance motets for Christmas, the Epiphany and Candlemas.

Josquin Desprez – Praeter rerum seriem
Cristóbal de Morales – Pastores, dicite, quidnam vidistis
John Sheppard – Reges Tharsis et insulae
Tomás Luis de Victoria – Senex puerum portabat
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina – Lumen ad revelationem gentium
Benjamin Britten – A Boy was Born
(Boy Trebles from Choir of All Saints’, East St Kilda)

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell; Carol Veldhoven; Katherine Lieschke; Victoria Brown;
Katharina Hochheiser; Claerwen Jones; Elizabeth O’Leary
Alto
Belinda Wong; Helena Ekins;
Yi Wen Chin; Niki Ebacioni
Tenor
Peter Campbell; Tim van Nooten; Vaughan McAlley;
Stuart Tennant; Michael Stephens
Bass
Nicholas Tolhurst;  Andrew Murray; Michael Strasser; Andrew Fysh;
Mike Ormerod; Mark Thawley; Tom Bell

All Souls’ Fauré Requiem (2019)

All Souls’ Requiem at All Saints’ Church
Saturday, 3 November 2018, 6pm
All Saints’ Anglican Church, East St Kilda

Service music included:
Gabriel Fauré
 Requiem in D minor, Op. 48

Soprano
Katherine Lieschke; Deborah Summerbell; Katharina Hochheiser; Claerwen Jones; Fiona Seers; Carol Veldhoven; Elizabeth O’Leary
Alto
Belinda Wong; Yi Wen Chin; Emma Warburton
Tenor
Vaughan McAlley; Adamm Ferrier; Oliver Patterson
Bass
Andrew Murray; Nicholas Tolhurst; Mike Ormerod; Mark Thawley

Calvin Bowman – organ
Katherine Lieschke – soprano solo
Nicholas Tolhurst – baritone solo

Monteverdi’s Vespers with Ludovico’s Band (2019)

Monday, 23 September 2019, 6:30pm
Melbourne Recital Centre – Elisabeth Murdoch Hall
Monteverdi’s Vespers
Southbank Series 2019 / Ludovico’s Band

In Monteverdi’s ambitious Vespers of 1610, the composer seamlessly combined unaccompanied choral church music with the opulent theatricality of the Baroque, demonstrating his mastery of both the old and the new. Ludovico’s Band joins forces with Ensemble Gombert under the direction of John O’Donnell for this performance of Monteverdi’s much-loved sacred work.

Claudio Monteverdi
Vespro della Beata Vergine SV 206

Artists
Christopher Watson – tenor
John O’Donnell – director/organ

Soprano
Katherine Lieschke**; Deborah Summerbell; Victoria Brown*;
Elizabeth O’Leary*; Katharina Hochheiser*; Claerwen Jones*; Fiona Seers
Alto
Belinda Wong; Juliana Kay;
Yi Wen Chin*; Niki Ebacioni; Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Christopher Watson**; Peter Campbell*; Tim van Nooten*;
Michael Stephens; Stuart Tennant; Vaughan McAlley
Bass
Andrew Fysh*; Nicholas Tolhurst; Andrew Murray;
Michael Strasser*; Mike Ormerod; Mark Thawley

**Principal Soloists
*Soloists

Ludovico’s Band
Marshall McGuire – artistic director/harp
Rachael Beesley – violin
Jennifer Kirsner – violin
Ruth Wilkinson – violone
Danny Lucin – cornett
Peter Reid – cornett
Julian Bain – alto sackbut
Trea Hindley – tenor sackbut
Glen Bardwell – bass sackbut
Samantha Cohen – theorbo
Nicholas Pollock – theorbo
Hannah Lane – harp

REVIEW
3 October 2019, Classic Melbourne [online]
Monteverdi’s Vespers: Ensemble Gombert and Ludovico’s Band

Julie McErlain

It seems extraordinary that Monteverdi’s 1610 Vespers of the Blessed Virgin was barely mentioned through the course of musical history until what seems to have been its first public performance in the 1930s and first recordings made in the 1950s. It was not surprising then, that it was a near capacity audience which highly anticipated being immersed in this iconic work, especially when the accomplished Ensemble Gombert and Ludovico’s Band guaranteed Vespers would be a highlight in this year’s Recital Centre program. Appropriately, this evening’s performance was scheduled for the early evening, taking us in time to the historic atmosphere of gentle reverence, prayer and beauty in this fine acoustic.

It is interesting that the title page of the first printing indicates “for use in princely rooms and chapels” and Monteverdi employs more “modern” secular elements with simple harmonies, strongly marked cadences, differences with the musical treatment for verses of the Psalms and boldly contrasted instrumental, solo and choral groups. Modern concert performances can vary widely, with the conductor choosing to omit the responsory antiphons used for the traditional sacred feast day in the Roman Catholic Church, and determine the instrumental accompaniment.

Just the vision of Ensemble Gombert and the period instruments of Ludovico’s Band was delightful, although no doubt staging was an initial challenge for musical director John O’Donnell and artistic director Marshall McGuire, given the dizzying variety of structures in a score requiring seven soloists, a chorus being divided in up to ten parts, accompanied by varied instrumental combinations or solos, or omitted altogether.

The rich, exciting and expressive voice of tenor soloist Christopher Watson commanded our attention and admiration with the opening plainchant preceding Deus in adjutorium. This opening choral section is sometimes given a more forthright, bold and energetic rendition, with exhilarating dotted rhythms and drive. Conducting from a central chamber organ John O’Donnell demonstrated his commitment to a more authentic and honest historic style, with a uniform pure and balanced sound and a constant tone and level of dynamics.

Dixit Dominus gave us the joy of six-part choral writing, contrasting dotted rhythms and fugal lines which perhaps were a little moderated in energy and tempo, but resonant and balanced. Sopranos showed purity and finesse although male voices bonded with more certainty and strength in the contrapuntal lines overshadowing the female voices at times. Nigra sum comes as an early pinnacle in the structure of Vespers. Its text from the Song of Songs associated with the Virgin Mary is more secular, more typical of the intimate style of a madrigal, with intimacy and expressiveness central to the tenor’s melodic flow. With solo theorbo accompaniment (Samantha Cohen), this solo was a gem, sung with breadth of expression and dynamics, admirable poise and diction. The audience was held motionless and silent at its conclusion

Pulchra es amica mea, a duet for two sopranos, accompanied by two harpists Marshall McGuire and Hannah Lane, showed youthful, dancing lilting qualities as the melodies intertwined. Again the audience was spell-bound by the beauty, purity and grace of this intimate madrigal-like movement.

Psalm Laetatus sum for six-part choir, unfolded from tenor voices accompanied by pairs of theorbos and harps. There were many contrasts as the female voices added more intricate ornamentation, and the full choir exuded a power and strength which contrasted with reverence and prayerfulness. The tenors again shone with their clarity and mastery of the imitative lines of Duo Seraphim. Monteverdi’s innovative ideas were most evident in his choice of beginning the section with two tenors at first accompanied by two theorbos, and with the later entry of the third tenor came excellent blend and balance, tonally expressive and heartwarming, with the complex contrapuntal rhythms fusing together for a very beautiful suspensions in the final cadence.
The choir gained more energy and body in the ten-part Nisi Dominus, and with a reverential and slightly restrained tempo, the splendid antiphonal responses and detail in the vocal parts was a joy to hear. The period instruments provided a supportive rhythmic ostinato with stunning sonority. There was full unity and authentic Baroque expression shown in a clear mood change and a contrasting mellow vocal tone with the solemnity of the final text. Most intimate and unconventional is the motet Audi Coelum, where the second tenor echoes the free fantasia like scale passages more usual in instrumental styles. With only a sparse continuo accompaniment, staging one voice with one theorbo to stage left seemed to physically isolate the pair, but the imitation was skilfully sung.

The fifth psalm Lauda Jerusalem Dominum for full ensemble and seven-part choir came with exciting contrasts of blended choral work and the voices rose above the instruments with more power and rejoicing. The lights brightened further with Sancta Maria ora pro nobis, as strings, sackbuts and cornets accompanied six female voices in a detailed tapestry of melodic expression.

These final sections leading into the hymn Ave Maris Stella, and the closing two minutes of the Magnificat with its rousing, dramatic conclusion heightened our respect for the collaboration of these two ensembles, as we were transported back in time to another place with music and spiritual cohesiveness. The final extended AMEN was performed with strength and majesty in a stirring conclusion, a tribute to Monteverdi’s belief that “The end of all good music is to affect the soul”.
Julie McErlain / Classic Melbourne