The Birmingham Press

Opening nights

New and experimental music concludes Part One of Conservatoire’s Opening Festival.

A melting pot of brand new, adventurous and experimental compositions rounds off Part One of the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire’s Opening Festival this month. Events include some of today’s most original voices from Jennifer Walshe to FitkinWall, and collaborations with Supersonic Festival to host the Moog Sound Lab, and with Birmingham Contemporary Music Group. The annual contemporary music festival CODA takes place over two days and the final concert of the season includes a brand new concerto by Michael Wolters for nine saxophones.

In a special Composer’s Platform event (18th June), professional musicians from Birmingham Contemporary Music Group perform the latest work by six composers from the Conservatoire’s renowned composition department. Last month, the close relationship between the two organisations was boosted with the announcement of the first one-year UK course dedicated to the performance and promotion of contemporary music which starts in September.

Teaming up with Supersonic Festival, Birmingham City University’s Royal Birmingham Conservatoire hosts the Moog Sound Lab, a four-week residency where musicians can experiment with analogue sound-scaping, synthesis and effects using Moog gear (22nd-24th June).

Thallein Ensemble offer a tribute to trail-blazing composer/vocalist Jennifer Walshe (front pic) in an exciting multi-media concert spanning most of Walshe’s career (22n d June). Included are an early piece for video and saxophone quartet from 1998 (The Thick Present), I:Same Person / II: Not the Same Person from 2007 with Walshe joining as vocalist, and Hygiene (2011) for multiple performers involving video, gesture and sound. Works from Conservatoire students Yfat Soul Zisso and Hugo Bell complete the programme.

Seán Clancy, Senior Lecturer in Composition, says, “Jennifer Walshe is one of the most important composers working today and we’re delighted to present this overview. Her work is truly interdisciplinary incorporating sound, gesture, video and text, often commenting on our relationship with fact, fiction and the internet. Expect video, sustained tone, unfamiliar sounds and lots of movement.”

Four concerts in one day are devoted to acclaimed electronica and harp duo FitkinWall aka composer-pianist Graham Fitkin and harpist Ruth Wall (pictured; 25th June). Using two harps, moog voyager, autoharp and synthesisers, FitkinWall Day include performances of Steve Reich masterpieces Sextet and Harp Phase, the English premiere of Fitkin’s Partially Screaming and a new arrangement of Flak for mallet percussion.

Fitkin has composed for the BBC Proms, New York City Ballet and Yo-Yo Ma, while Ruth has performed with musicians like Goldfrapp, Will Gregory Moog Ensemble and Kathryn Tickell.

A Night of the Unexpected (25th June, 9.45pm, Eastside Jazz Club) launches this year’s Coda Festival of experimental and innovative work through showcases, interactive installations, late night soundings and events of all kinds across the Conservatoire’s many performance spaces, including the ultimate elevator music, actually performed in a lift (26th-27th June).

The final concert of the current season features the premiere of a new concerto by Michael Wolters, Deputy Head of Composition, performed by the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire Symphony Orchestra under Barry Wordsworth (29th June). There are more of them than us: A Queer Concerto for nine saxophones and orchestra explores how “being different means not being part of the community”. Thus the nine saxophonists are casually dressed in front of a formally-dressed orchestra, playing instruments that also ‘don’t belong’ in a traditional orchestra.

Full details of all events from www.bcu.ac.uk/concerts or 0121 331 590

Exit mobile version