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

Christmas Carols in the Garden (2014)

Saturday 13 December at 4:30 pm
Duneira, Mt Macedon

Bring a picnic rug and hamper and hear a concert of traditional a cappella carols sung by one of Australia’s finest choirs, Ensemble Gombert.
This year you can sing-a-long to some traditional favourites!

PROGRAM

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Katherine Lieschke
Elizabeth Lieschke
Claerwen Jones
Katharina Hochheiser
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Thomas Bland
Michael Strasser
Mike Ormerod

Christmas to Candlemas: A Jacobean celebration (2014)

Friday, 5 December 2014, 8pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Road, Kew

Subscription Concert 4
A Jacobean celebration with viols and organ

With guest artists: Consort Eclectus

Program
Thomas Weelkes
(1576-1623)
Gloria in excelsis Deo
Orlando Gibbons
(1583-1625)
This is the record of John
Thomas Tomkins
(1572-1656)
Behold, I bring you glad tidings
John Bull
(1562/3-1628)
Christe Redemptor omnium
(organ solo)

William Byrd
(c.1540-1623)
This day Christ was born
(A Carol for Christmas Day)

John Amner
(1579-1641)
O ye little flock
John Amner Lo, how from heav’n like stars
Orlando Gibbons A Fancy [for a double organ]
William Byrd O God that drives the cheerful Sun
(A Carol for New-Year’s Day)

John Bull Almighty God, which by the leading of a star
Orlando Gibbons See, see, the Word is incarnate


Performance of anthems with viols has been on our wish list for some years. Now that it is to become a reality it is impossible not to anticipate our Christmas to Candlemas season a bit in order to include that favourite Advent anthem, Gibbons’ This is the record of John. For that matter the other Gibbons piece, See, see the Word is incarnate also transcends the temporal limits, subsequently taking us through Passion, Resurrection and Ascension, but it begins with the Incarnation. This is truly a rare opportunity to hear many of these works.

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Katherine Lieschke
Katherine Norman
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim Van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Mike Ormerod
Michael Strasser

 

REVIEW

Sunday, 8 December 2014, The Age [Melbourne], p.31
A Jacobean Celebration review: Elegant music-making from Christmas to Candlemas
Clive O’Connell

A JACOBEAN CELEBRATION ★★★★
Ensemble Gombert
Xavier College Chapel
December 5

This edition of the ensemble’s customary Christmas to Candlemas miscellany engaged the forces of Consort Electus, a viol quintet comprising most of the city’s expert performers – Laura Vaughan and Laura Moore, Victoria Watts, Miriam Morris and Ruth Wilkinson. Conductor John O’Donnell employed the consort in most of the program’s contents, interspersed with his own organ solos by John Bull and Orlando Gibbons.

The wealth of musical brilliance available to the court of James I and his great cathedral choirs was extraordinary, evidenced on Friday evening in well-known anthems and verse-settings by Weelkes and Gibbons, like the latter’s This is the record of John full of dramatic vitality and ardour.

High satisfaction came in Thomas Tomkins Behold, I bring you glad tidings juxtaposing a clear soprano solo against a hefty 10-part choral fabric. Some curiosities unearthed by O’Donnell were a pair of anthems by John Amner of Ely Cathedral, settings that alternated duets and trios with the full chorus to splendid effect, bringing to the Gospel interaction of angels and shepherds a music both elevated and earthy.

Once again, the Gombert singers succeeded in stressing the transcendental character of the coming season’s nature; the night’s only carols – both by William Byrd and far removed in language from the well-worn imagery of snow, holly and holy nights – celebrated the simple Nativity event in restrained affirmation and welcomed the New Year with hope and affirming confidence. Not for everybody, perhaps, but this elegant music-making serves as an enriching musical experience.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Two Parisian Masterpieces @MRC (2014)

Friday, 7 November 2014, 6pm
Melbourne Recital Centre – Salon
Local Heroes Series 2014

Program
Olivier Messaien Cinq rechants
Naji Hakim Missa Redemptionis

Olivier Messiaen, organist at La Trinité in Paris from 1931 until his death, bequeathed his position to Lebanese-born composer Naji Hakim, having reached the opinion that Hakim was the greatest improviser he had ever heard.

Messiaen’s Cinq rechants was composed in 1948, the last work of his Trilogie de Tristan, a love trilogy for pianist Yvonne Loriod, who eventually became his second wife. Hakim’s Missa Redemptionis dates from 1995, and this is its Australian première.

SINGERS

Soprano
Hannah Irvine
Katherine Lieschke
Michelle Clark
Alto
Juliana Kay
Yi Wen Chin
Miranda Gronow
Tenor
Daniel Thomson
Robin Czuchnowski
Vaughan McAlley
Bass
Andrew Murray
Julien Robinson
Michael Strasser

 

Magnificat @MRC (2014)

Thursday, 2 October 2014, 6pm
Melbourne Recital Centre – Salon
Local Heroes Series 2014

Program
Urmas Sisask Benedictio
Arvo Part Magnificat
Sieben Magnificat-Antiphonen
Ode IX
from Kanon pokajanen
Edmund Rubbra Mass in Honour of St Teresa of Avila
Calvin Bowman Death be not proud

Estonian composer Arvo Pärt takes centre stage in this program with three works in three languages (Latin, German and Church Slavonic) based on or around the Song of Mary, universally known as Magnificat. The program is introduced by a short work from a compatriot and complemented by the last significant choral work of English composer Edmund Rubbra, and Australian Calvin Bowman’s settings of John Donne, composed for Ensemble Gombert in 2008.

SINGERS

Soprano
Fiona Seers
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Lieschke
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Helen Gagliano
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Thomas Bland
Andrew Murray
Michael Strasser
Mike Ormerod

 

Motets of Bach & Brahms (2014)

Saturday, 7 June 2014, 8.30pm
Sunday, 8 June 2014, 8.30pm
St Ambrose’s Church, Woodend

Woodend Winter Arts Festival


Program
Johann Sebastian Bach Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied
Jesu, meine Freude
Johannes Brahms Fest- und Gedenksprüche, op. 109
Drei Motetten, op. 110

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Lieschke
Katherine Norman
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Thomas Bland
Andrew Murray
Michael Strasser
Mike Ormerod (Sat)
Jerzy Kozlowski (Sun)

 

Music for Double Choir (2014)

Concert 3: Saturday 10 May at 5.30 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 3

Music for double choir immediately conjures up Venice in many minds, but most of the famed Venetian repertoire involves instruments as well as voices. This program surveys double-choir music of various parts of Europe from the late Renaissance to the early twentieth century. The major work is the wonderful Frank Martin Mass, which returns to our repertoire a decade after our first performance of it.

 

Program
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina Laudate Dominum omnes gentes
Orlande de Lassus Osculetur me
Tomás Luis de Victoria Regina caeli laetare
Michael Praetorius Gott der Vater wohn uns bei
Johann Sebastian Bach Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied
Johannes Brahms Fest- und Gedenksprüche, Opus 109
William Henry Harris Faire is the heaven
Frank Martin Mass for Double Choir

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Katherine Lieschke
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Thomas Bland
Michael Strasser
Mike Ormerod

 


REVIEW

Tuesday, 13 May 2014, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
Ensemble Gombert’s sumptuous singing spans centuries of change
Clive O’Connell

Music for Double Choir
Ensemble Gombert
Xavier College Chapel
May 10

In an often sumptuous exhibition, John O’Donnell and his Ensemble Gombert rang the cross-centuries changes on Western music for two choirs.  On Saturday, the singers began with Palestrina and his contemporaries: Lassus in suggestive form with a Song of Songs extract, Victoria in an opulent Regina caeli, and a brief litany by Praetorius –  bread-and-butter fare for these musicians.

Bach’s motet Singet dem Herrn emphasised the linear ferment that tests even experienced choirs.  Taking a measured pace, O’Donnell combined the whirring activity of the composer’s web with tensile strength, the result a lesson in discipline and perseverance. The Fest-und Gedenkspruche from Brahms’ later years presented the lower voices with carefully negotiated hurdles.

Still, the evening’s main work, Frank Martin’s Mass for Double Choir found the Gombert sopranos in excellent shape, even in the high B stress-points of the Kyrie and Hosanna, the many part sub-divisions handled with admirable smoothness.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Faire is the Heaven (2014)

Sunday 4 May at 3pm
The Basilica of St Mary of the Angels, Yarra Street, Geelong

Faire is the Heaven : Music for Double Choir
A one-hour recital as part of Canticles: Festival of Sacred Music, Geelong

Program
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina Laudate Dominum omnes gentes
Orlande de Lassus Osculetur me
Tomás Luis de Victoria Regina caeli laetare
Michael Praetorius Gott der Vater wohn uns bei
William Henry Harris Faire is the heaven
Frank Martin Mass for Double Choir

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Lieschke
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Matthew Thomson
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Thomas Bland
Michael Strasser
Mike Ormerod

 

Five centuries of Austrian a cappella Sacred Music (2014)

Concert 2: Saturday 29 March at 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 2

Some of the composers represented here were Austrian imports while others were home grown. But all works were composed in Austria, some for Catholic liturgical use, Brahms’s motets possibly for Lutheran use, Schubert’s Hebrew setting of the 92nd Psalm for the Jewish synagogue, while the Isaac, Vaet and Schoenberg works are non-liturgical. Of course Austria’s best-known sacred music consists of Masses for soloists, choir and orchestra, but this program shows that there was also a fine a cappella tradition spanning the centuries.

 

Program
Heinrich Isaac Virgo prudentissima
Jacobus Vaet Continuo lacrimas
Philippe de Monte Super flumina Babylonis
Johann Stadlmayr O magnum mysterium
Johann Fux Three Offertoria:
Ad te, Domine, levavi
Ave Maria, gratia plena
Tollite portas
Johann Ernst Eberlin Two Offertoria
Bonum est confiteri Domino
Improperium exspectavit cor meum
Arnold Schoenberg Friede auf Erden
Franz Schubert Der 92. Psalm
Johannes Brahms Drei Motetten, Opus 110

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Thomas Bland
Michael Strasser
Mike Ormerod


REVIEW

Tuesday, 1 April 2014, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
Singers traverse years in the Ensemble Gombert’s Five Centuries of Austrian a capella sacred music
Clive O’Connell

Five Centuries of Austrian A Cappella Sacred Music
Ensemble Gombert
Xavier College Chapel
March 29

John O’Donnell’s excellent choral group covered a vast field and unearthed some surprises. The Gomberts rarely disappoint, carrying along some stodgy material through a thorough professionalism and uniformity of timbre generally sustained for lengthy paragraphs, if not entire works.

O’Donnell began his cross-centuries journey with the motet Virgo prudentissima by Heinrich Isaac, a striking six-line structure that oscillates between duets for upper voices and massive complexes that manage to sound static on top and seething with action under the surface. This work set a high benchmark, sustained through a following clutch of briefer pieces.

A set of three offertoria by Johann Fux showed the teacher of counterpoint putting theory into heavy-handed practice. With a lurch into the 19th century, matters improved through Schubert’s venture into Hebrew, a setting of Psalm 92 distinguished for its robust reverence.

The Three Motets Op. 110 by Brahms are better known and combined melodic generosity with emotional compression. The most difficult music-making came in Schoenberg’s Friede auf Erden, packed with harmonic stumbling blocks and a linear mesh that never stops challenging its executants. These singers produced a fluent and level-headed reading, working through its uncompromising linear argument with exemplary dedication.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Commemorating Anne of Brittany (2014)

Concert 1: Saturday 22 February 2014 at 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 1

When Anne of Brittany, uniquely the wife of two successive French kings, as well as Duchess of Brittany in her own right, died on 9 January 1514, her funeral lasted for forty days. Such an extended ceremony must have involved a lot of music, though only the three motets presented here can be identified with certainty. Nevertheless it is generally accepted that Prioris’s fine Requiem was also written for the occasion.

 

 

Program
Jean Mouton
(c.1459-1522)
Quis dabit oculis nostris
Pierre Moulu
(1484?-c.1550)
Fière Attropos
Costanzo Festa
(c.1490-1543)
Quis dabit oculis nostris
Josquin Desprez
(c.1450-1521)
De profundis
Johannes Prioris
(c.1460-c.1514)
Requiem

Introitus: Requiem aeternam
Kyrie
Graduale: Si ambulum
Sequentia: Dies irae
(Gregorian chant)
Offertorium: Domine Jesu Christe
Sanctus
Agnus Dei
Communio: Lux aeterna

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Carol Veldhoven
Deborah Summerbell
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Miranda Gronow
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Thomas Bland
Chris Potter
Michael Strasser
Jerzy Kozlowski

 

REVIEW

Tuesday, 25 Febrary 2014, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
Ensemble Gombert in fine renditions of funeral music for Anne of Brittany

Clive O’Connell

Commemorating Anne Of Brittany
Ensemble Gombert
Xavier College Chapel
February 22

When she died in 1514 aged 31, Duchess Anne of Brittany had been married to a German emperor and two French kings and had had 14 pregnancies. The last independent ruler of her state, she was a notable arts patron and her funeral rites lasted for 40 days, involving a good deal of music, although very few original compositions for these ceremonies have been documented.

For Saturday’s opening Ensemble Gombert series recital, artistic director John O’Donnell put together a program of works, both definites and maybes, connected with this remarkable woman’s extended obsequies, the most significant a Requiem by Johannes Prioris. This mass reveals an honest individuality and the choir gave it a finely-shaped performance with a satisfying balance between soprano and bass lines, notably in the rich Kyrie and a calmly celebratory Agnus Dei, although the well-worn plainchant Dies irae sequence seemed an odd if suitably sombre interpolation.

Two settings of the text Quis dabit oculis nostris, by Jean Mouton and Costanzo Festa, showed once again the Gomberts’ hallmarks of linear balance and controlled power. This was further substantiated by a glowing reading of Josquin’s late five-part De profundis with an interpretative depth that distinguishes this ensemble’s work at its best.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age