Eddie Fisher (husband)

John Barry, Alex North (composer)
Michael Jackson (don’t go there)
Barry Manilow (her arm candy at Jackson’s funeral. 
Stephen Sondheim. Who’d have guessed?


And here’s the video.

The thing is, our Liz didn’t sing. This may be her only melodic attempt on fulm – her X-factor moment.

The seasonal Cambridge centrepiece, widely broadcast, has been given a makeover this year by music director Stephen Cleobury. 

The big event is Golgoatha by the Swiss composer Frank Martin. Petris Vasks, the Latvian, gets a big look-in and Prime Brass will bow out the festival with anticipations of the royal wedding.

Press release below.










Now in its seventh year, Easter at King’s has forged an enviable
reputation for presenting traditional and innovative repertoire for Passiontide
and Easter.  It offers a varied feast of
services and concerts that illustrate, contemplate and celebrate the Holy Week
and Easter narrative. In most years, BBC Radio 3 has broadcast from the
Festival to listeners all over the world.  


 

The climax of this year’s
festival is on Good Friday, 22 April, with a rare opportunity to hear Frank
Martin’s epic oratorio, Gologtha,
which will be broadcast live on Radio 3. 
Martin wrote some of the most poignant sacred music of the 20th
century. Golgotha (1948), written
when the composer was at the height of his powers, is a personal response to
the desolation of war-torn Europe. The awe-inspiring space of King’s College
Chapel, combined with the drama and sheer scale of Martin’s work, will make the
evening a rewarding musical and spiritual experience.

 

Easter at King’s opens on Tuesday 19 April with a performance of Bach’s St John Passion. The Choir of King’s
College Cambridge and Academy of Ancient Music combine forces again and the strong
cast of soloists includes King’s alumnus and Cambridge local Andrew Kennedy as
the Evangelist, and former Cambridge student, Elin Manahan Thomas returns to
sing soprano. There is an additional opportunity to enjoy this performance in
London, at the Cadogan Hall on April 20th.

 

Chamber Music for Maundy
Thursday, on 21 April, offers a chance for reflection and contemplation. The
concert will take place at the east end of the Chapel by candlelight. The trio
of top young artists, including Cambridge favourite and former King’s
chorister, Guy Johnston, will perform Vask’s extraordinary allegorical work, Episodi e Canto perpetuo framed by works
by Beethoven and Fauré.

 

Pergolesi’s masterpiece, Stabat Mater, combines with Bach for the Easter Vigil programme on
23 April. The work conveys, with great beauty, deep and heart-rending
compassion for Mary’s suffering during the events of Good Friday. Bach’s
powerful Cantata Christ lag in Todesbanden was written for Easter and
takes us from the crucifixion to the resurrection, whilst another work by Bach,
the Fourth Brandenburg Concerto prefigures the celebratory theme of Easter
Sunday. These three works provide the perfect mix of celebration and
contemplation for a concert set at the heart of the Easter weekend.

 

Daniel Hyde, a former Organ
Scholar at King’s College, will give an organ recital on Monday 25 April, which
concludes our Easter celebrations. However, we will be celebrating the Royal
Wedding in style the following Saturday with a brass concert given by Prime
Brass. The concert programme features some great British music, including
William Walton’s majestic Crown Imperial.

 

Throughout, the powerful and
moving Chapel liturgies are fundamental to the series and are sung by the
Chapel Choir.  Good Friday is an
excellent day to visit Cambridge with Allegri’s famous Miserere mei Deus sung in the morning and the Lamentations of Jeremiah of Thomas Tallis at evensong.
Alternatively, why not come to the concerts on Easter Eve and then stay the
night so that you can also enjoy the services on Easter Sunday itself?

 

We are taking the Festival outside
King’s Chapel and into Cambridge for the first time in 2011. To celebrate the
400th anniversary of the death of Victoria, the extraordinarily powerful Tenebrae Responsories will be performed
in three late night services in three different Cambridge College Chapels. The
climax of the three will be in King’s Chapel on April 23rd.

 

 

Easter at
King’s Schedule

 

Tuesday
19 April

7.30pm
Concert:

 Bach St
John Passion

 

Maundy
Thursday 21 April

5.30pm
Sung Eucharist and Stripping of the Altar

8.00pm
Concert:

Chamber Music for Maundy Thursday

Beethoven Trio op 1 no 2 in G Major

Vasks “Episodi e Canto perpetuo”

Fauré Trio op 120 in D minor

9.30pm
Victoria Tenebrae Responsories
Clare College Chapel

 

Good
Friday 22 April

10.30am
Ante-Communion and Veneration of the Cross

5.00pm
Choral Evensong

6.55pm
Concert:

Frank Martin Golgotha

9.30pm
Victoria Tenebrae Responsories
 Corpus Christi College Chapel

 

Holy
Saturday 23 April

7.00pm
Concert:

Pergolesi Stabat Mater

Bach Brandenburg
Concerto No. 4

9.30pm
Victoria Tenebrae Responsories

 

Easter
Day Sunday 24 April

10.30am
Sung Eucharist

3.30pm
Festal Evensong

 

Easter
Monday 25 April

4.00pm
Concert

Daniel Hyde Organ Recital

 

Saturday
30 April

6.30pm
Concert:

Prime Brass

Music for Easter …and a Royal Wedding

 

Anyone who thought the classical music was in for a quiet time after this blog helped break up the proposed merger between Universal Music and the Harrison Parrott agency is in for a rude awakening. Since then, Parrott has grabbed a chunk of faltering IMG and vultures are swirling around other likely victims. 

So who’s making the next move?

My spies tell me it’s Helene Grimaud, the star earner of HP and personal protegée of its founder, Jasper Parrott. La Grimaud has been looking uneasy of late and playing worse.
Instead of devoting more time to practise, she has been seen huddling in dark corners with predators. Obviously, the first on her tail was the desperate agency wing of Universal Music which has been left high and dry since the HP deal fell through. Grimaud makes her records for DG. A hook-up would make sense. 
But what’s this I hear from Milan? Grimaud, spotted in a cosy nook with persuasive Kathryn Enticott and Libby Abrahams of IMG.
No-one’s confirming anything, but I’m told the deal’s imminent. Grimaud goes to IMG.
That’s seriously bad news for Parrott, since Grimaud earns more in commission than the entire raft of singers he took off IMG.
But it’s even worse than Universal, who are looking not just glum, but pointless.  

Better believe it.

I have received the following case history from a British musician who went to work in the sun as principal cellist of the Tenerife Symphony Orchestra.

His name is Mark Peters. I can vouch for Mark as an individual – he used to play in the Concentus Musicus Wien with Nikolaus Harnoncourt – though not for the details of his case. It does, however, throw up certain similarities with the long-running Brazil crisis and it may have ramifications beyond the glorious island of Tenerife – not to mention the rolling lawns of Glyndebourne (see earlier instance, here).

Here is Mark playing:
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And here is his letter:

Dear Norman,

 

Some months ago you invited me to share
with you details pertaining to my demise as principal cellist with the Tenerife
Symphony Orchestra (OST). Although I did initiate a letter to you on that
occasion (as a footnote to my ex-colleague, Mr. Gomez Rios winning the Solti
conducting award) I have tended to keep this information to myself as part of
my own personal odyssey.  However, in
the light of the Brasilian orchestral situation and the reactions it is
provoking internationally, I would like to share my case with you and the
orchestral world at large as an example of the successful purging of a
long-standing member of a “European” Orchestra, in a campaign which
employed similar criteria to those applied by the administration of the
Brasilian Orchestra in Rio.

 

In my case the supposed need to subjugate a
principal player to a “quality control” was eclipsed by the highly
vindictive nature of the campaign against me, a campaign aimed principally at
eliminating an uncomfortable voice raised in protest against the hijacking of
the OST by a small group of musicians within the orchestra, in cahoots with an
unconscious management and a misguided and immature conductor, in the face of
an apathetic and intimidated orchestra.

 

The majority of us agreed that – after a
meritorious career spanning almost two decades, in which time the OST rose from
its roots as a semi-professional chamber orchestra composed of music-loving
Tenerifans to a fairly professional symphony orchestra which vied with the best
in Spain – maestro Victor Pablo’s term had reached its logical and natural end.
However, the pathological hatred towards him harboured by key members of the
orchestral committee charged with finding his successor, led to the precipitous
hiring of the first-best candidate, the Chinese conductor, Lü Jia,
circumventing the rational search process which had in fact been initiated by
Mr. Pablo and the serving orchestral manager at that time.

 

Around the same time (2006 or so),  Mr. Paolo Morena, a friend of Mr. Jia’s, was
invested as leader of the OST by way of dubious proceedings resulting in Mr.
Morena’s becoming the first and only member of this orchestra to serve without
having auditioned for his post, that is to say, without members of the
orchestral collective having had any say in his hiring.

 

It was my vocal opposition to these
goings-on which led to my being placed before a jury consisting solely of my
accusers and their cohorts: Mr. Jia, Mr. Morena, the then Manager Mr. Santos
and the two principal members of the orchestral commitee, Mr. Kirby and Mr.
Jones, principal clarinette and bass, respectively.

The Spanish cellist, Asier Polo was
apparently invited to sit on this tribunal but, much to his credit, did not
show up on the day. I was found to be wanting in my performance, a decision I
would not necessarily contest on and of its own merit, as the futility of the
exercise was apparent from the very start. I had recently come off sick-leave
for an arthritic elbow and severe depression having for months suffered
exaggerated intimidation and persecution under Mr. Jia’s heavy stick and by no
means was I in conditions to confront such a test of nerves. The psycho-terror
had included such measures as Mr. Jia programming the Wilhelm Tell Overture as
the opening number of his inauguration as music director in an open-air concert
with tens of thousands in the audience, with him doing his utmost to make my
life as soloist as difficult as possible.

 

The decision of the jury was contested by
the public workers syndicate I belong to and in a laughably open-and-shut case
was struck down by a first-circuit judge here in Tenerife. The government –
sole patron of the OST – appealed and won reversal of the sentence – no
surprise given the notoriously partisan composition of local superior court. At
our appeal to the national supreme court in Madrid it was stated that we would
have had to have presented a precedential case identical in all details to
mine. No luck there. So it was that I was afforded a small severance – 39.000€
after some 16 years of faithful service in which I appeared repeatedly as
soloist with the OST, years in which I also made other significant contributions
to the musical life on this island, conducting a local youth orchestra during
two seasons of highly successful concerts (which were then inexplicably
discontinued) and teaching at the conservatory. Left to my own devises I now
struggle to make ends meet and feed my four children on an island where the
existential possibilities for a classical musician are severely limited to say
the least.

 

As for the OST: a little over a year ago
the orchestra voted 54 to 7 against the renewal of Mr. Jia’s contract, having
apparently tired of his tyrannical and despotic tactics of intimidation and
belittlement and disappointed at having gone nowhere with him (except for a
single concert in Bejing) after having heard great promises about receiving
international exposure. Although he remains as “principal guest
conductor” he no longer figures as music director, much to relief also of
the administration who had soon tired of his capricious modus operandi – a
litany of unanswered emails, cancellations, dodgy programming, etc.

 

He leaves behind an orchestra trained like
a show horse whose robot-like, soulless playing is a shadow of what it was once
capable of in its hey-day. His arrogance and favouritism have worn thin in the
eyes of the public (many of whose number no longer attend concerts) and
orchestra alike – the childish posturing of his cronies, including but not
limited to on-stage intimidation and the taunting of colleagues not of the
inner circle (a speciality of Mr. Gomez Rios) have left an indelible mark. Needless
to say, I am very grateful not to have suffered through this chapter in the
history of the OST, a chapter which should serve as a great lesson – for those
who care to analyse – about the squandering of the moral and ethical authority
which in the best of situations should reside within the institution of the
symphony orchestra, an institution which should be setting an example for
harmonious coexistence among fellows. How very sad indeed!

 

Thank you Norman, for your untiring
championing of the better side of human nature in the professional musical
world and best wishes for all orchestral colleagues the world around.

 

Best regards,

 

Mark Peters