Music in the Lent Term 2017: A Review
This Lent Term began and ended with the remarkable
achievement of one pupil in particular, Owen Saldanha in the Upper Sixth. It
began with Owen performing with the National Youth Orchestra at the Royal
Festival Hall and ended with his performing Ravel’s G major
Piano Concerto at St John’s, Smith Square, as part of the Vaughan’s Easter Concert.
Owen is a prodigiously gifted musician – this term has seen him add a Diploma
on the Piano (passed with Distinction) to the ARCO qualification that he achieved
on the organ last term. He also won the Vaughan’s Music Competition, although
he was run pretty close that evening by another remarkable talent, Filippo
Turkheimer. And these are just two of the many, and it is many, remarkable
musicians that we have at the School. In all different kinds of music too. What
a precious gift the musical traditions of the School are – and how lucky we are
that so many pupils take full advantage of it.
Throughout the term we have run our Annual Music Competition
with 90 pupils participating in five heats. The Final held at the end of March
was adjudicated by David Hill, conductor of the BBC Singers and the Bach Choir.
David awarded the first places to Alessio D’Andrea and Owen, as I mentioned
above, whilst describing the standard of the performances as a whole as
“extraordinary”.
The winners of the Heats were as follows:
Piano (Adjudicator,
Anthony Williams, Radley College)
Junior: Alessandro
Mackinnon & Alexander Wu
Senior: William Crossley &Owen Saldanha
Strings (Adjudicator,
Adrian Bradbury, Cellist)
Junior: Gabriele Montone & Nilton Aranda Neto
Senior: Harry Fetherstonhaugh
& Justin Perfecto
Woodwind
(Adjudicator, Amanda Cousin, Flautist)
Junior: Dominic de Vivenot & Luke Ngyuen
Senior: Logan Stewart & Owen Saldanha
Brass (Adjudicator,
Amos Miller, Trombonist)
Junior: Barnaby Stewart & Joshua Schrijnen
Senior: Filippo Turkheimer & Joseph Bingham Cooper
Singing (Adjudicator,
Diana Moore, Mezzo Soprano)
Junior: Alessio D’Andrea & James Fernandes
Senior: Sean Roche Watson, Filippo Trukheimer & Emilia
Staniaszek
Overall Winners
(Adjudicator, David Hill, Conductor & Organist)
Junior: Alessio D’Andrea
Senior: Owen Saldanha
Earlier in the term we once again held our annual
collaboration with Southbank Sinfonia, our ‘orchestra in residence’. This
involved an excellent composition workshop, with the professional musicians
bringing to life compositions by pupils from across the School and then
side-by-side preparation of Brahms’ Fourth Symphony, conducted by David
Corkhill (see video below). Working with Southbank Sinfonia is always one of the highlights of the
School’s music year and this year was no exception. It was especially rewarding
to see how very excited by the work this year’s set of Vaughan participants
were and also lovely to see how very positive and helpful this year’s Southbank
Sinfonia contingent were too. This is a wonderful collaboration that next year
will celebrate its tenth anniversary: there are big plans afoot!
The orchestra also performed at the Spring Concert, held at
St Paul’s Church in March. We set the church up differently to try to help
people see more clearly what was going on - sight lines are not easy in that
building – and this seemed to work very well. The older boys and girls played very
nicely that evening but it was the work of the younger boys that was
particularly impressive. Second Orchestra has never been so big or so strong –
under the expert guidance of Mr Jackson it is flourishing and has developed that
all important sense of identity as a group, with which comes loyalty and
commitment. Also really very good were Jazz Orchestra, superbly directed by
Miss Wilby, who also steered the stronger than ever Junior Big Band through
their contribution. It was lovely to see the younger boys playing with such
confidence in some complicated music, and also lovely to see that way that the
older boys were so supportive of their younger fellow musicians. This was an
evening marked by a strong sense of camaraderie among the pupils. Mention should also be made of Mr Manoras who
directed both Junior and Senior Strings with his customary flair and precision.
The Big Band performed at the Spring Concert and have been
busy elsewhere besides this term, playing at the Half Moon in Putney in January
and at the Bulls Head in Barnes at the end of term. In February we held the
always popular Big Band Evening, at which there were some excellent vocalists
alongside the Band, providing an evening of real entertainment. If you’ve never
seen a Big Band concert do come along – we do have a quite a good time! The
Band is always in a state of flux and we are about to lost some good players as
this year’s Upper Sixth leave, but some of the younger boys who have been
finding their feet in important seats in the band are now fully establishing
themselves and the band shows great potential.
The Schola Cantorum has worked very hard this term, singing
each Wednesday for the School Mass whilst also preparing a number of memorable
events. Early in the term we sang for the Vigil Mass at Westminster Cathedral
and then a little later in January gave a concert at St Peter’s, Eaton Square
for Aid to the Church in Need. At the concert the Schola gave its first ever
performance of The Twelve by William
Walton, a famously difficult work, both for the choir and the organist (see the video below). The
Schola acquitted itself admirably, assisted, as always, by the quite brilliant
accompanying of Mr Evans. The concert, which also included the Requiem by
Duruflé, raised £750 for the crucial work of ACN.
In February the Schola travelled to Liverpool, having been
granted the considerable honour of singing the Sunday services as guests of the
Metropolitan Cathedral. We had a great weekend, also singing a concert at the
Dome from Home, on the Wirral. Before
half-term the Schola also sang the first performance of the winning composition
in a competition run for the Music Education Expo held at the Olympia.
For Ash Wednesday, at Our Lady of Victories for the whole School,
the Schola prepared the annual performance of Allegri’s Miserere with the
famous top C acrobatics for one of the trebles. The duty fell to Aidan Cole
this year, who sang them admirably, assisted by James Fernandes who sang one,
and also by Joseph Short who sang the less flamboyant but arguably more
difficult second treble part in the repeating solo verses.
Most of this half-term was spent preparing for a very
special event though, a concert entitled Festa
Venziana!, given with an ensemble called His Majestys Sagbutts and Cornetts
and tenors Nicholas Mulroy and Peter Davoren. His Majestys Sagbutts and
Cornetts perform on instruments that are the same as those used in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and together we presented a programme of
music from Venice at that time. The concert was given in the twelfth century
Temple Church, the first time the Schola has performed there, and as part of
the Temple Music Foundation Concert Series. Being involved in this prestigious
concert series helped us draw a large audience and also resulted in the concert
being professionally reviewed – four stars!
There was one further event for the Schola when at the end
of March the choir sang Evensong at Westminster Abbey. This was an especially
lovely occasion marked by some very fine singing from the choir in music by
Henry Purcell, who was organist at the Abbey and is buried just a few feet from
where the choir sang.
The term came to an end with the Easter Concert, held on Saturday 8 April at St John’s, Smith
Square. This included the Ravel G major Piano Concerto performed by Owen Saldanha; Owen gave the most remarkably brilliant performance of this difficult, complex work, accompanied exquisitely by the Belgravia Chamber Orchestra. This was followed by the most colossal undertaking for many years by the
Music Department, as we performed Vaughan William’s A Sea
Symphony. This huge work, a setting of poetry by Walt Whitman, represented a very
considerable challenge but the choir rose magnificently to the occasion. We
were joined by two wonderful professional soloists, Sarah Fox and Duncan Rock. It brought to a close a wonderful term of music-making, full of variety and challenge for all. Well done to everyone who has been of this term's roller-coaster ride and very many thanks to the parents for all their support.