There
are concerts that are merely concerts and there
are concerts that are events: this was an event.
What made it so was the charismatic and mesmeric
direction and playing of Joanna MacGregor. Throughout
the evening she inspired extraordinary music-making
of the highest calibre, that was both imaginative
and inspired.
The concert opened with
Igor Stravinsky’s Dumbarton Oaks (1938)
- played without a conductor by the versatile
fifteen-strong Britten Sinfonia. The playing
was refreshingly jazzy in its inflection,
with the players sounding closer to a dance
band, producing sharp, jagged and angular
sounds, the lively, perfectly balanced and
integrated rhythms a clear signal of the treats
to come.
Louis ‘Moondog’ Hardin
(1916-1999) was a wide-ranging musician whose
works combined jazz, classical and poetry
and he composed over eighty symphonies. Blinded
at the age of 16 in an accident, the composer
lived in poverty on the streets for thirty
years in New York City and eventually settled
in Germany.
This concert consisted
of a compilation of twelve short pieces arranged
by MacGregor, who unified these fragments
into a coherent symphonic whole. She said
of Moondog’s music that it has all the "strict
discipline and purity of Bach’s Fugues."
While the musical content was ostensibly conservative,
the performances themselves were electrifying
and intense. The first number, Single Foot
(c. 1990s), originally written for two organs
and percussion, sounded like a fox trot (and
actually represented for Moondog hoofbeats
of a horse with a single foot gait!) Here
the Britten Sinfonia and jazz musicians sounded
very stylish and played with a syncopated
swagger.
Most haunting was Invocation
(1988) for Indian flute, throbbing electric
guitar and drum taps. Another intriguing piece
was Reedroy (1985) which had a Charleston
1920’s swing to it, with Sheppard playing
solo on soprano saxophone with an elegant,
plangent grace. The closing number, Heath
on the Heather (1955) was played with
great verve and spontaneity with both orchestra
and jazz musicians perfectly integrated, yet
the actual music itself remained trite and
tedious with a single banal theme continually
repeated to the point of becoming merely boring.
The performance seemed to illustrate perfectly
Andre Previn’s dictum: "The basic
difference between classical music and jazz
is that in the former the music is always
greater than its performance - whereas the
way jazz is performed is always more important
than what is being played".
Throughout MacGregor
did not conduct per se, but directed
her fellow musicians at close intimate range,
almost face to face as she strutted the stage
boogying to the music. Making stabbing movements
with her hands, in the manner of Boulez, her
vigorous gestures were razor sharp and rhythmically
taut.
The concert ended with
eight fugues from J.S Bach’s unfinished Art
of the Fugue arranged by MacGregor and
which also included three interludes where
Sheppard and Sriram improvised. MacGregor
said of "her favourite composer"
that she wanted her arrangement to bring out
"…the depth, complexity and variety
of the piece" seeing the music not
as gloomy but as "bright, energetic
and heroic music". Her innovative
arrangements, ranging from baroque to bossa
nova, certainly celebrated these facets of
the music wonderfully well, but being more
of a work-in-progress this was, musically
speaking, more of a diamond in the rough -
such is the nature of experimentation.
MacGregor played the
opening piano solo with a stern ghostly starkness
and simplicity, with her fellow musicians
slowly seeping in and sounding similar to
Stravinsky’e Dumbarton Oaks heard earlier.
MacGregor stated that she had encouraged the
Britten Sinfonia to play with the improvised
spontaneity of jazz players, jokingly saying
"I think I have created a monster!"
- which may explain why they integrated
so well with the other jazz musicians. An
hypnotic moment in these hybrid arrangements
was scored for sombre electric guitar, moody
saxophone and muffled drums, strikingly reminiscent
of the film sound-track to Paris Texas.
Towards the closing passages the entire forces
exploded in anarchy before the music broke
off suddenly leaving us without an end. There
was something uncannily disturbing but deeply
moving about this ‘end without an end’ and
the audience simply went wild, giving MacGregor
and her inspired fellow musicians a well deserved
ovation.
Alex Russell