Concerts Archives - Bethan Morgan-Williams https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/category/concerts/ Composer Sat, 04 Dec 2021 14:01:38 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/orange-red-kite-square-transparent-background-e1591267008906-100x100.png Concerts Archives - Bethan Morgan-Williams https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/category/concerts/ 32 32 Three releases: coming soon https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/three-releases-coming-soon/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=three-releases-coming-soon https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/three-releases-coming-soon/#respond Mon, 11 Jan 2021 20:03:52 +0000 https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/?p=4783 A new piece, Gêmdis, was recorded by Ensemble Musikfabrik in November and is expected to be released very soon. Meanwhile, two smaller pieces have been recorded live to video tape and are due to be released as part of the ensemble's Lockdown Tapes series in the coming months.

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Three Releases: Coming Soon

11 January 2021, Hodley

Considering I’ve not being eligible for any help from the government during this time, I’ve been fortunate to have had plenty to occupy myself with. October saw the premiere of Demeter’s Cry by Fenella Humphreys (violin), Iñigo Mikeleiz Berrade (accordion), Ben Griffiths (double bass) and George Barton (drum-kit) at the Chiltern Arts Festival. It remains the only concert I have managed to get to since the beginning of the first Lockdown and it was a surreal experience. Members of the audience were escorted directly to and from their seats; they were required to wear masks for the duration of the concert; and refreshments had to be ordered online prior to the event. Demeter’s Cry is a stupidly difficult piece, featuring Zappa-style cross-rhythms and Vivaldi-come-Xenakis-esque virtuosity, but the quartet excelled through it like firefighters. I don’t think the audience quite knew what hit them!

After that, I drove to Cologne for the final phase of the Composer Collider Europe project with Ensemble Musikfabrik. I left mid-Wales at 6am and arrived at Mediapark about 12 hours later, only to be told that the concert had been cancelled; the recording team could no longer travel to Germany from The Netherlands; and Germany was going into Lockdown again as of a few days time. Madness. What was I doing there? Well, I’m very glad I stayed. The ensemble managed to find audio engineers to replace the missing Dutch team and I enjoyed seven hours(!) rehearsal time on my piece, Gêmdis a one-movement piece for solo E-flat clarinet & ensemble. Everyone was fantastic. The soloist, Carl Rosman (clarinet), is a real gem and a formidable talent; the conductor, Christan Eggen, is an extraordinary timekeeper with exemplary rehearsal technique; the recording engineer, Martin Pilger, is remarkably observant and was a joy to work with; and the ensemble were astute, focussed and enthusiastic. Since then, Martin and I have been back and forth working on the mix and it was finalised last week, meaning the release of this recording is fast approaching! And I can’t wait to share it with you all.

The next project in line was the transcription of Kagel’s Ludwig van. for stage. Carl Rosman (Ensemble Musikfabrik) had taken on the somewhat daunting task of transcribing the fifty-minute LP for two voices, two pianos and string quartet, and he’d asked me to be his side-kick. I love this piece, so I was looking forward to getting stuck in but I have to admit, I was continually baffled by Carl’s quiet assuredness regarding the size of the project and the amount of time we had to give it. It turned into a gargantuan puzzle, comprising physical cut-outs of photocopied Beethoven excerpts; scribbled transcriptions of various degrees of accuracy (there is large scope between what Beethoven would likely have written and what’s actually heard on the LP); and a mishmash of digital samples. Thankfully my role was not concerned with the fitting of things together but rather, with the deciphering of pitch content and as things went on, as a voice for promoting the what’s actually heard side of the notation coin. I thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity to work so closely with this piece, there are layers that only reveal themselves as one listens again, and again, and more deeply, and perhaps even more slowly… it’s a piece that just keeps giving. The project enabled me to take a break from creative thinking too which actually, was quite refreshing. You can read Carl’s account of the process here.

In other news, two very special audio-visual recordings are due to be released as part of Ensemble Musikfabrik’s Lockdown Tapes series very soon. The first is of Datod – a violin and piano piece that I wrote last year – bewitchingly performed by Hannah Weirich (violin) and Ulrich Löffler (piano). Datod is a musical exploration of controlled freedom and is dedicated to my dear friend, Sally Groves. The second audio-visual recording is of a solo version of Gêmdis, for E-flat clarinet. It must be about a year since Carl first put the idea in my head but sure enough, on 29 December the solo version was recorded live to tape by Janet Sinica. Initially, I felt quite nervous about making a solo version of an ensemble piece but thankfully, it only needed to be eight-minutes long (whereas the ensemble version is seventeen-minutes). That took the pressure off the material a little, because it meant that I could reassemble the primary ideas so as to quite literally form a miniature version of the structure (apart from the fact that sections and b appear in reverse order) without revealing everything that the ensemble version is. This latter point was important to me because I wanted to leave room for the possibility of forming a Gêmdis triptych at some point, with the solo version being the first ‘movement’; the ensemble version being the second; and a fixed tape version becoming the third (and final) adaptation. Only time will tell…

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Datod at Concertini 10 https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/datod-at-concertini-10/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=datod-at-concertini-10 https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/datod-at-concertini-10/#respond Wed, 15 Jul 2020 08:34:21 +0000 https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/?p=4232 Datod, for violin and piano, received its premiere in Cologne yesterday. Performers Hannah Weirich and Ulrich Löffler absolutely blew me away with two(!) fabulous performances. A recording of the second performance, which was especially moving, can be accessed via this post.

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Datod at Concertini 10

14 July 2020, Llandyssil

Yesterday saw the premiere and subsequent performance of Datod, a piece for violin and piano that I wrote over Christmas. Commissioned by the Park Lane Group for a Robert Gerhard memorial concert in May, the original premiere was sadly cancelled due to the pandemic. After hearing that news, I sent the score to Hannah Weirich and Ulrich Löffler, violinist and pianist with Ensemble Musikfabrik who, conveniently, happen to share a roof. It was a long shot, or so I thought, because at the time no one was giving live performances and things were looking somewhat bleak but, fast-forward a couple of months or so and BOOM: not just a premiere but a second performance too! I feel incredibly fortunate to know these two.

The second performance of Datod yesterday was absolutely staggering. Even hearing it via a live stream on Facebook, I was absolutely blown away by Hannah and Uli’s communication and musicianship. I wrote to them directly afterwards (once I’d caught my breath!) to try and capture the essence of what I was feeling. I couldn’t quite get there in words, and I’m quite sure the words I did send will have hinted at a state of elation one tends only to experience when not entirely sober. Anyway, the closest I can get is this: it felt like my heart had grown to pervade my entire body.

© Janet Sinica

The anxiety I feel when hearing my music played is only just about stomachable. I am used to this. Rewind a few years and I would often go from beginning to end with my head buried deep in my lap. It was the only way I could get through it. Thankfully, I have managed to move past that phase and am now able to embody the tension and disquiet I feel so those around me are not aware of it. (That is, unless they try to hold my hand, at which point they will quickly discover I am perspiring at a most-unusual rate.) Anyway, why am I telling you this? Because yesterday, and for the first time, the anxiety transformed into euphoria. It was the same feeling, but the other side of that feeling somehow. It was as though I’d been dragged through the usual panic attack but had reached the other side for the first time. I found myself in a sort of fairyland. Can it be that anxiety and euphoria are one and the same? 

Needless to say, my emotions got the better of me yesterday. I was asleep on the sofa by about 8pm it had been that draining. I hadn’t been expecting to get to hear the piece so soon, and I couldn’t have asked for anything more. Even comments I had made only 45-minutes before the premiere had been taken on board. Hannah and Uli really are something special, and hearing them put this piece together has been like a dream come true (if from a distance). Sally Groves, who the piece is dedicated to, was on the phone almost as soon as the clapping started. I was still in a state of speechlessness at that point but, I was overjoyed to hear her reaction and I am thrilled that I chose to dedicate this piece to her. Oh, and a win for Welsh-speakers: I am told Uli has now mastered the pronunciation of, “iechyd da.” Congratulations Uli!

Missed it?
Not to worry! Click on the ‘play’ button below and you will be able to listen to the second performance.

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Fenella’s Homemade Concert #14 https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/fenella-homemade-concert/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=fenella-homemade-concert https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/fenella-homemade-concert/#respond Fri, 12 Jun 2020 15:01:35 +0000 https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/?p=4054 A new piece! One, Two, Bakerloo... is for solo violin and was premiered on Youtube by Fenella Humphreys, 10 June 2020. The video is still available to stream and can be accessed via this post.

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Fenella's Homemade Concert #14

12 June 2020, Llandyssil

Tuesday 2 June was a warm day. It had been warm for a while and I had gotten quite used to being in the garden. The only time I’m really capable of doing nothing is when the sun is out. Despite that, it was coming up for evening time, I had just cracked a beer and was in need of some mental stimulation. (Garden conversation tends to be limited to bird calls, sheep cries and the odd rhythmical intervention from a woodpecker, none of which am I particularly adept at conversing in.)

It must have only been two weeks since I’d received an email from Fenella, asking if I happened to have any unaccompanied violin pieces hiding away (I didn’t). So, I thought, “go and get that lovely hardback Moleskine book you have and you can write something for Fenella right here, in the sunshine.” I’m not usually very good at working outside but, this felt different. I wanted to write something short and brisk, and I already had a suitable motif circling. Fast forward half an hour or so, and the piece was finished. What was on the page was a direct transcription of an improvisation that had taken place in my head, albeit in slow motion. Why not just leave it at that then? 

The following morning, I typed it out and sent it to Fenella. She replied just a few hours later with one of the best responses a composer could hope for: “This has made me actually want to get my violin out for the first time in days.” Well, mission complete! 

Before even a week had passed, Fenella got in touch to say she would be programming the new piece in her next Homemade Concert. This is by far the quickest turn around I have ever experienced (a Coronavirus positive, perhaps?). Fenella has been very active since Lockdown began, as I’m sure many of you already know, putting out concerts every Wednesday and Sunday from the comfort of her own living room. These concerts are a wonderful opportunity for audiences to experience Fenella’s exquisite versatility and enthusiasm, as well as to discover new works by a whole range of composers. I felt honoured to be asked to be a part of it. 

This particular concert – number fourteen in the series – was to feature music by Ben Gaunt, Richard Alan Searle and myself. Ben had written a piece called Nostalgic Spellsphere, an inherently circular piece of music that uses repetition to realise hypnotic effects. Meanwhile, Richard had written a piece called Variation After Variation, which is a reaction to Fenella’s recent Paganini project. You can hear more about that here (scroll down to watch the video). And last but not least then, my piece: One, Two, Bakerloo… 

Intended as an encore piece, this bagatelle is a minimalist collision of additive melody and metamorphosis techniques. The title is derived from an unfinished (sixteenth century) poem that’s featured in The Little Book of Mornington Crescent. It reads:

One, two, Bakerloo
Three, four

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Double Double: Live https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/double-double-live/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=double-double-live https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/double-double-live/#respond Thu, 04 Jun 2020 12:41:00 +0000 https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/?p=3319 Double Double is a string quartet that was written for Hilary Browning (Associate Principal Cello, Liverpool Philharmonic) in 2017/8. This post tells of my journey through from the conceiving of ideas to the final performance in February 2020, which was recorded and is available to listen to on Soundcloud.

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Double Double: Live

4 June 2020, Llandyssil

A couple of years ago, Hilary Browning (Associate Principal Cello, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra) asked me to write a string quartet for a new group she was planning to setup with a focus on playing both new music, and lost works by women. I wasn’t immediately sold on the idea, believing I wasn’t yet ready to attempt writing for string quartet but, after giving it some thought, I eventually found a way in – via electronic music. I made some recordings of myself improvising on the violin and set about producing a fixed media track that could then be transcribed for four players.

Fast forward a year or so, and Double Double (extracts of) received its first outing as part of International Women’s Day 2019, which was held in Liverpool. It was a fantastic day with some excellent speeches. I especially enjoyed Helen Thomas’ look back on her career in publishing, which featured some revealing tales about Elliott Carter and his relationship with the London Sinfonietta. I couldn’t stay for the whole day unfortunately, because it was the final week of the Six Nations and Wales were due to play Ireland that afternoon (needs must!), but I thoroughly enjoyed my morning and the audience were remarkably engaging and responsive. In case you were wondering, Liverpool really is an incredible place to watch the rugby. You can pretty much guarantee each pub will have supporters from every nation, which just makes for the most marvellous dynamic. (Wales won that day by the way!)

I digress. Having outed excerpts of the new piece, the official premiere was now looming. I’ve already mentioned Helen Thomas and her revealing tales, but it was thanks to her that Double Double received its premiere as part of the University of Liverpool’s Lunchtime Concert Series at Leggate Theatre in November 2019. (This is a wonderful series by the way: free to attend; expertly curated; and realised with a uniquely Liverpudlian ambition.) The performance was well-received, and so we went to the pub to celebrate (sadly minus Hilary, who was due to be back on stage later that evening with Ensemble 10/10).

This brings us to February 2020. Equilibrium were performing their first concert as part of the Liverpool Philharmonic’s Chamber Music Series and they had selected Double Double to be included in the programme. It was 8pm on a Monday evening and out, onto the stage, stepped Fanny Mendelssohn’s granddaughter. This was news to me, though I did recognise her somehow. (It must have only been about ten minutes before, that I had returned to the auditorium to report the presence of an intruder in my dressing room. Little did I know that this so called ‘intruder’ was in fact a relative of one of the greatest female composers of the Romantic period, here to introduce the concert.) “That’s the lady from my dressing room!”, I gasped.

And so, Fanny stayed to hear my piece and was certainly less of a stranger by the end of the evening. I was very happy with how it all went (which is extremely rare!), but also a little sad to know that this was the end of the journey. Working with Equilibrium – with Kate Richardson, Kate Marsden, Rachel Jones and Hilary Browning – has been one of the highlights of my career so far and I am delighted to be able to share this recording with you. I wish the quartet every success for the future and look forward to hearing many more performances featuring new music and rescued works by women. Qui ne risque rien n’a rien! 

The concert was recorded by Thomas Rydeard, to whom we are all tremendously grateful. You can access the recording here (directly below), or via my Soundcloud page. 

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A Composer in Lockdown https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/a-composer-in-lockdown/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-composer-in-lockdown https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/a-composer-in-lockdown/#respond Sat, 18 Apr 2020 11:02:00 +0000 https://bethanmorganwilliams.com/?p=3088 What strange times we find ourselves in! There were meant to be two premieres of mine in May, one of which has been postponed and the other sadly cancelled. There is still plenty to look forward to though...

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A Composer in Lockdown

18 April 2020, Llandyssil

What strange times we find ourselves in! Not so much has changed for me though, it has to be said. I moved back to Wales (from The Netherlands) in July, to spend a year working on my own in the countryside. It’s been just what I needed. The only regular contact I have had is with my lovely students at Yorkshire Young Musicians, where I teach on Sundays. That loss of human interaction since Lockdown began has really been the only change to my routine. Well, that and the need to plan a lot more time to do my shopping. I have, like many, managed to incorporate a little more exercise into my week… I can’t stand running but I have started doing some lifting; I’m enjoying cycling again (an activity that is substantially harder in Wales than it is in The Netherlands!); and there are so many fantastic walks to rejoice in on my doorstep. I feel hugely fortunate to be surrounded by such beautiful scenery at this time. I do miss going to the pub though…

There were meant to be two premieres of mine in May: a song that was commissioned by Canolfan Gerdd William Mathias to be programmed during the Wales International Piano Festival (WIPF); and a violin and piano duo that was to receive its first performance by Sulki Yu and Dominic Degavino as part of the Park Lane Group’s memorial concert for Robert Gerhard in London. Luckily, WIPF has been postponed to October but, the memorial concert has sadly been cancelled. This means I have a brand new violin and piano piece with no premiere… The piece – Datod – is a musical exploration of controlled freedom and is dedicated to Sally Groves. View score

Another concert that has sadly been cancelled is the BBC Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert that was due to take place on 26 June at LSO St. Luke’s. Aptly titled, ‘Antoine Tamestit & Friends: with Colin Currie’, the concert was to feature pieces for viola (Antoine) and percussion (Colin) by Tristan Murail, Bruno Mantovani, Elliot Carter, Luciano Berio and me. This cancellation is especially upsetting as the piece I’ve written – Dog in the Moon – is dedicated to my late dog, Hettie. I really hope the BBC and LSO can find another date for this concert as it is a piece that’s especially close to my heart. You can read more about it here.

On a brighter note, there is something to look forward to that, conveniently, is not impacted by the need for physical distancing: the release of Panuknik Legacies III by LSO Live. The disk includes Scoot – an orchestral piece I wrote in 2015 – along with pieces by Patrick Giguère, Donghoon Shin, Ayanna Witter-Johnson, Sasha Siem, Ewan Campbell, Joanna Lee, Ben Ashby, Alex Roth, Cevanne Horrocks-Hopayian, Patrick Brennan, Michael Taplin and Matthew Sergeant. It was recorded by François-Xavier Roth and the London Symphony Orchestra in April 2019, and is due to be released very soon.

Currently, I am working on a piece for Ensemble Musikfabrik that’s due to receive its premiere in Den Haag in November. It’s a sort of mini clarinet concerto scored for flute, oboe, solo clarinet in Eb, horn, trombone, tuba, piano & electronics. It is the first ensemble piece I have attempted that doesn’t include any bowed-strings, and it’s proving to be a rather steep learning curve as a result. I was meant to be travelling to Köln at the end of this month to workshop ideas but, of course, that is no longer feasible. Thankfully, the ensemble’s administrators are working hard to try and take as much of those sessions online as possible, which is fantastic, although I am going to miss the opportunity to try out some of the tutti sections. Be that as it may, I am enjoying the challenge of writing something Carl Rosman will actually have to practise… it’s “game on!” (his words not mine).

Anyway, thanks for reading. Stay safe everyone!

More soon.

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