HASTINGS INTERNATIONAL PIANO LAUNCHES ONLINE CONCERT SERIES: ‘AN EVENING IN WITH…’

Hastings International Piano, the charity responsible for the Hastings International Piano Concerto Competition and the Hastings International Piano Festival, has launched an online concert series to support the careers of their prizewinners in this time of national crisis. The short recitals premier every Friday evening on Facebook at 7pm GMT and at Hastingsinternationalpiano.org

In these times when the livelihood of our musicians is at risk, with engagements being cancelled and studies on hold, this series aims to provide an income to the young competition prizewinners as well as offering Hastings Piano supporters and the wider public something to look forward to at the end of the week.
The series launched on Friday 20th March with 2018 Hastings International Piano Concerto Competition Winner Roman Kosyakov giving a concert from his Birmingham Conservatoire, and continues every Friday evening. The concerts are free to view, but viewers are able to make a voluntary donation to Hastings International Piano Engagement Fund, or choose to join as a Friend whilst watching. These donations help to continue the organisations work supporting young pianists as well as engagement projects offered to the young people of Hastings and the surrounding area. This includes free tickets to events as well as workshops, school visits and inspirational talks from visiting artists.
The Hastings International Piano Concerto Competition is an internationally-renowned competition for young concert pianists from around the world, attracting 170 applicants in 2019 across global auditions, 40 of which came to compete in Hastings. Their prize: the opportunity to perform with The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra on our two-night final and to win a first prize of £15,000. The Competition returns in February 2021.
The inaugural Hastings International Piano Festival took place in February/March 2020 as the Concerto Competition moved to every other year. The Festival was a spectacular 2-week celebration of the piano involving 168 international artists including Rufus Wainwright, Guy Chambers, Reuben James, Claire Martin OBE, Rachel Portman OBE, Mark Kermode, Martin James Bartlett, The Puppini Sisters, The Dodge Brothers, The Swedish Trio, Liane Carroll, Neil Brand, The Pasadena Roof Orchestra and The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, who all performed at multiple venues across the creative hub of Hastings on England’s south coast.
A major success of the inaugural festival was the growth in young audiences across the region enabled to experience the festival, with the under-21 ticket scheme devised to provide free tickets for performances and a hugely popular free interactive piano concert for younger children. The music education programme provided over 1000 children with an opportunity to attend youth workshops, performances and master-classes, provided by many of the headline artists.
Curator and Managing Director of Hastings International Piano Ian Roberts says – “It is so important to help and support young exceptional talent who are forging ahead with their careers. The current situation musicians find themselves in has denied them the opportunity to perform all over the world with ensembles, orchestras and as solo artists. Our on-line concert series is our own way of providing a regular performance opportunity and continuing to support our past and current competition winners in their future development and endeavours. “

Visit our new website https://hastingsinternationalpiano.org

Twitter
Hastings Concerto Comp
@HIPCC

Facebook
Hastings International Piano Concerto Competition
@hastingsconcertocompetition
https://www.facebook.com/HastingsConcertoCompetition/

Instagram
Hastings Piano Concerto
@hastingspianoconcerto
https://www.instagram.com/hastingspianoconcerto

Jess Gillam Virtual Scratch Orchestra debuts live on 17 April

Today Classic BRIT award-winning saxophonist Jess Gillam launches the Jess Gillam Virtual Scratch Orchestra. She is inviting musicians of any standard to come together and play music virtually with her, giving the first performance online on Friday 17 April.

Jess Gillam said: ‘For me, music is all about people! People uniting, people sharing and people listening. At a very difficult time, when it is not currently possible to be physically together to share and make music, hopefully this is a way in which we can create something together from afar. ‘Where Are We Now?’ is one of my favourite songs by David Bowie. It’s hauntingly beautiful and seems very appropriate as we all reflect on the world and what is happening around us. This is the first song he released after a long period of silence in 2013.’

The Jess Gillam Virtual Scratch Orchestra will come together for the first time to perform David Bowie’s Where Are We Now? from Gillam’s debut album RISE (Decca Classics) which shot to No.1 in the Official UK Classical Chart in April 2019. Taking part is easy:

Take a look at the parts available and download the music from her website. The instruments are not prescriptive, find a part that works for you and participate
Video yourself playing your part either playing along to the click track or the released version. Submissions can be recorded on a smartphone or video recorder but please use headphones so only you can be heard
Send the video to info@jessgillamsax.co.uk with a line saying ‘I give Universal Music Group permission to use this video.’ The deadline is Friday 10 April at 6pm
Sign up to the mailing list to make sure you see the final results
Gillam will then perform the piece live with the combined pre-recorded videos on Friday 17 April at 6pm on her Instagram (@jessgillamsax).

Parts available to download:

Violin 1 & 2
Viola
Cello
Double Bass
Oboe 1 & 2
Horn in F 1, 2, 3 & 4
Harp
Piano
Celeste/keyboard
Timpani
Parts & click track available here

Released version of Where We Are Now:

YouTube
Spotify
Apple Music
RDMR are now looking after Jess Gillam’s personal PR, for all interview requests, images and further information please contact:

Rebecca Driver Media Relations

Tel: 07425 151 458

Email: ruth@rdmr.co.uk

Web: www.rdmr.co.uk

Hastings Contemporary Launches Robot-Assisted Gallery Tours Amid Closure

A unique collaboration between Hastings Contemporary and Bristol Robotics Lab is the first time telepresence robot technology has been used in a gallery in the UK

  hastingscontemporary.org | @_art_on_sea | #hastingscontemporary | #artonsea

One of the most iconic and much-loved British galleries of modern and contemporary art has responded to temporary closure due to the coronavirus by utilising robotics technology to provide its audiences with remote access to its exhibitions while its doors remain closed.

In a UK first, Hastings Contemporary, an independent charitable arts organisation on England’s south coast, has teamed up with Bristol Robotics Lab to offer its members and audiences old and new alike the opportunity to continue to visit the gallery and experience the best of modern and contemporary arts via the Double, a two-wheeled videoconferencing robot that can guide an operator and up to five people through real time tours of the gallery and its current exhibitions, as well as taking in the gallery’s much-loved views over the historic Stade fishing beach and English Channel.

Praminda Caleb-Solly, Professor for Assistive Robotics and Intelligent Health Technologies at the Bristol Robotics Lab, UWE said “I am absolutely thrilled to team up with Hastings Contemporary as part of our Arts and Humanities Research Council D4D project to provide people who are socially isolated the opportunity to enjoy art via the telepresence robot. This is an excellent example of how robotics technology can be used to support people in difficult situations such as we are currently experiencing. There are other applications for use of telepresence robots within health and social care and I look forward to learning from our experiences at Hastings to apply elsewhere.”

Esther Fox, Hastings Contemporary Trustee and Researcher on the D4D project Esther Fox has said: “This has been made possible by a partnership with a pioneering research programme D4D, which explores how new technologies can change experiences of disability, social belonging and community engagement. Up until now we have been working with disabled people to explore how the telepresence robot might open up access to spaces they could not experience. We are now excited to see how we can enable a wider group of people to access great art and combat isolation, particularly those with underlying health conditions who are having to self-isolate.”

The telepresence robot, developed by Double Robotics, provides a revolutionary solution for arts organisations such as Hastings Contemporary in overcoming barriers of isolation. The gallery is delighted that through its adoption of this technology it will be able to continue to support families, children and older visitors alike, offering opportunities to enter the gallery space from the comfort of a sofa, bed or kitchen table.

The gallery is initially planning to offer robot-assisted guided tours of its current programme to visitors stuck at home, led by its curators and gallery team, as well applying the technology further to allow local artist-educators to facilitate interactive art lessons by piloting local children via the robot around the gallery. The gallery’s experience using the telepresence robot will also help to deepen scientific knowledge and understanding of the technical, social and organisational issues regarding use of such technology and inform future research and development.

The gallery is planning, in addition, further ways to use innovative technologies to ‘flip’ the gallery inside out so that people can continue to benefit from its work while stuck at home, including developing a new online hub of art and mindfulness resources, with the children of key workers in mind; creating bespoke digital art lessons and creative learning activities for many of the now closed schools in Hastings; and virtual 3D renderings of its three postponed Spring shows, Victor Pasmore: Line & Space, Stephen Chambers: The Court of Redonda, and Quentin Blake: We Live In Worrying Times.

Remote-controlled telepresence technology has not been used in a British gallery in this way before and Hastings Contemporary is delighted that it is able to create a radical and exciting alternative to the traditional gallery experience by harnessing the next generation of robotic hardware and empower both the gallery’s team and audiences during this testing time.

Liz Gilmore, Director of Hastings Contemporary said “As we navigate through these testing times and manage the loss of important revenue streams, I’m thrilled to embrace such innovation and creativity. Our trials with the telepresence robot have buoyed the team here in Hastings and will enable a new and pioneering means of continued engagement with our visitors. Next week I will be leading some virtual tours to bring to life the incredible exhibitions on offer, prioritising people who are most affected by the lockdown and are now having to self-isolate for a number of weeks. Press will also be able to join in by appointment. Recordings of these tours will be made available to the public afterwards. In this way, over the months ahead, we hope to continue our exciting future calendar of contemporary art exhibitions, and our educational and community engagement programmes.”

To visit the gallery and be one of the first people in the UK to experience this technology please email info@hastingscontemporary.org.

As with many other arts organisations, Hastings Contemporary has temporarily closed its doors in the interest of its visitors’ safety and in line with the British Government’s guidelines regarding the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic. The gallery continues today to appeal directly to its members, past and present sponsors, and the wider community of Hastings and East Sussex to support its transition into the digital realm during this health crisis.

One-off donations to the gallery are now being accepted.

To donate £5: https://pay.gocardless.com/AL0002EBH1DZJ1

To donate £10: https://pay.gocardless.com/AL0002EBH30YS2

To donate £20: https://pay.gocardless.com/AL0002EBH6CSTY

To donate £50: https://pay.gocardless.com/AL0003033G8WP2

To donate £100: https://pay.gocardless.com/AL0003033M8Y77

Or text ARTONSEA to 70085 to donate £3.

 

 

 

 

 

Hastings International Piano presents a series of online short concerts.

In these times when the livelihood of our musicians is at risk, we are launching this series to support the careers of our prizewinners and will be paying them a performance fee.

CONCERT 2: AN EVENING IN WITH MAXIM KINASOV
The second in our series will be 2019 Hastings International Piano Concerto Competition Prizewinner Maxim Kinasov.
Friday 27th March 7pm

VIEW ON FACEBOOK HERE – https://www.facebook.com/HastingsConcertoCompetition

OR ON OUR WEBSITE HERE- https://www.hastingsinternationalpiano.org/an-evening-in-with/

Programme
Franck-Bauer Prelude, Fugue et Variation, Op. 18
Rachmaninov Etude-tableau in C minor, Op. 33 No. 3

 

The concerts are free to view, but viewers are able to make a voluntary donation to Hastings International Piano Engagement Fund, or choose to join as a Friend.

Donate

http://bit.ly/JustGivingPianoFest

Become a Friend

https://www.hastingsinternationalpiano.org/become-a-friend-or-patron/

 

The Theatres go dark

Events are cancelled, venues are closed but performers and managers still need to plan for both the immediate and more long-term future. Behind every cancellation notice there are many individuals whose lives are changed, both professionally and socially. Over the last week I have been talking to musicians and singers, directors and managers about the effect the coronavirus is having on them, and considering the longer term implications for the arts in Hastings.

I caught up with Neil Sellman, Chair of the Stables Theatre. He has only been in place for a year and in that time has overseen a broadening of the Stables outreach and involvement in the local community. Needless to say this has come to an immediate halt with the onset of the coronavirus.

‘Thankfully we are in a secure position financially even with having to close the theatre with immediate effect. We rely almost entirely on volunteers and the local community have always given us strong financial support. We have wanted for some time to open up the theatre for greater community use and had just started to do so when the pandemic hit us.’

Given the importance of volunteers to the Stables, I wondered how self-isolation was affecting them. ‘At least 80% of our volunteers come into the risk category! The majority of them are fit, well and enthusiastic but realistically we all need to be very careful at this time and it would be quite wrong to allow people to work with us if they were putting themselves, and others, at risk by doing so. ‘

And how were plans for the future going? ‘Looking at the shows booked in for this season, we had 42 listed of which 7 have taken place. However, we may have to reschedule or cancel many of these if the epidemic continues. As we have no dedicated staff within the theatre for particular jobs it is difficult to retain consistency of support which is why we have reluctantly decided to close for three months, subject to further advice. We hope we can reopen in September. As long as we are given the all clear to do so we could start quite quickly, as plays were already in rehearsal and could be restarted with relative ease once casts can meet up again.

Our website gives details and we try to keep it updated on an almost daily basis as the situation changes. Members can now choose to get refunds for tickets already purchased or defer them on the assumption that the plays will be staged at a later date. This, obviously, is not the case with visiting shows, like Antony & Cleopatra, where we are in the hands of the companies themselves as to their future plans, and immediate decisions to cancel. Valuable as the internet is we are very aware that many of our regular patrons don’t have access to IT and we are therefore making a point of sending letters (almost unheard of these days!) to ensure everyone knows what is happening. We hope to bring them all good news of an opening date in the near future.’

The next day I spoke to Polo Piatti about the Opus Theatre’s situation and his own as a professional composer. Just before we spoke he had released a composite video from the Composers’ Festival 2018 which is an inspiring example of the breadth of music-making and the way he has galvanised composers from across the world to join with him here on the South Coast.

I wondered how his plans for Opus Theatre were changing in the light of the pandemic. ‘We have obviously had to make a lot of changes. I am sorry we have had to postpone the concert which soprano Thomasin Trezise and guitarist Sergio Puccini were due to give in early May. This is essentially due to the travel restrictions now in place in Argentina. Put bluntly, Sergio is not allowed to travel, either abroad or within Argentina. When you add this to our own closures it is obvious that we have no idea when the concert might be able to take place.

It is a little different for Hastings Sinfonia, but even here there is an on-going problem with rehearsals, which again are impossible for the time being. We have considered the idea of out-door events, which might be feasible in the summer, but again rehearsing beforehand is currently out of the question. There is some thought of on-line rehearsals, in the same way as on-line choirs have been , very successfully, created, but not all of our players have the equipment, or the expertise, necessary to set this up.

In many ways the same is true for our plans for the next Composers’ Festival, where we were to have had an orchestra from Singapore. Now, with the dates unknown, all of this is unsure. Thankfully the London Mozart Players are very keen to ensure that my oratorio Libera Nos goes ahead even if as expected we have to postpone its premiere. It seems somewhat ironic that the text is a plea for rescue – the very thing the whole world wants at this moment, regardless of individual beliefs. ‘

There is one silver lining to the otherwise grey clouds. ‘Like so many other people at the moment, I am in voluntary isolation, which means I have time to finish writing the cello concerto for which I have a specific commission and also, potentially, to get back to my opera which I keep having to abandon because of the pressure of other work. ‘

Let us hope that the dynamism shown by both the Stables Theatre and Opus Theatre is able to continue once this pandemic has passed, and will return to us refreshed, renewed and as viable as ever.

Roman Kosyakov on Facebook link with HIPF

Hastings International Piano will be presenting a series of online 15 minute concerts, beginning with a short recital from our
2018 Competition Winner Roman Kosyakov
premiering live this Friday evening at 7pm on Facebook.

In these times when the livelihood of our musicians is at risk, we are launching this series to support the careers of our prizewinners and will be paying them a performance fee.

The concerts will be free to view, but viewers will be able to make a voluntary donation to Hastings International Piano Engagement Fund, or choose to join as a Friend. The concerts will be free to view, but viewers will be able to make a voluntary donation to Hastings International Piano Engagement Fund, or choose to join as a Friend.

CDs/DVDs March 2020 2

Fandango: music for solo guitar and string quartet
Johan Lofving, guitar; Consone Quartet
RESONUS RES 10260

Most of this recording is given over to solo pieces from the late eighteenth / early nineteenth century with the addition of Boccherini’s unusual but appealing quintet. The recording demonstrates the range of guitar music at a time when it was popular as a classical instrument.

J S Bach: Orgelbuchlein
Stephen Farr, Trost organ, Waltershausen
RESONUS RES 10259

The Trost organ dates from 1730 and is huge. While there is much to enjoy in the range of approach which Stephen Farr brings to the Orgelbuchlein I cannot help feeling that the works really sit more comfortably on a much smaller instrument. There is often an intimacy in the writing which is lost in the vast spaces of enormous church buildings. However this is highly subjective and I accept that there will be many very happy with both the sound produced and the quality of the playing.

Mahler: Symphony No 6
Essener Philharmoniker, Tomas Netopil
OEHMS OC 1716

I found Tomas Netopil’s approach too introspective in the opening movement – a lack of fire where it normally overwhelms – but the slow movement works very well and the playing is splendid throughout. If you want a different approach, this may appeal.

Janacek: From the House of the Dead
Bavarian State Opera, Simone Young
BELAIR BAC173

While musically impressive this is somewhat difficult to follow on a tv screen. The production uses video clips and it is not always clear to what extent what we are watching is current, in the mind of the singer or a comment on the action. Not being able to see all the stage, which we would in the theatre, we can’t choose what to focus on. This said, the musical side is impressive with Peter Rose outstanding as Gorjancikov, but supported by a fine cast of singers who can act with intelligence.

Ferruccio Busoni: Violin Sonatas
Ingolf Turban, violin, Ilja Scheps, piano
CPO 555 213-2

I found this pleasant but not really engaging. The sort of pieces one might encounter at a lunchtime recital in an arts festival but unlikely to be something one returns to regularly. Useful to add to a larger collection.

Brahms: Songs of Loss and Betrayal
Simon Wallfisch, baritone; Edward Rushton, piano
RESONUS RES 10258

These are highly personal pieces from Brahms, bringing an intimacy and intensity meant for almost domestic enjoyment, even when the text is challenging. The cd includes Lieder und Gesange von G F Daumer Op57; Funf Lieder Op105; Funf Lieder Op94 and Lieder und Gesange Op32.

Verdi; Nabucco
Teatro Regio di Parma, Francesco Ivan Ciampa
DYNAMIC 37867

The approach is unconventional – seemingly set on board a vast container ship – but the modern costumes and sense of servitude is very well presented, and given the excellent singing throughout it is actually very moving despite any potential reservations about the setting. If you get a chance look at Va pensiero which is superb in its simplicity.

CDs/DVDs March 2020 – 1

J S Bach: Well-tempered Clavier Book II
Andras Schiff, piano
NAXOS 2.110654

This is the second half of the full recording from the 2018 Prom concerts and is as magnificent as the first. There is little to add at this point, but if you missed the live event, or the TV coverage, this is a must. No more to say!

Schumann: Symphonies 1 & 4 arranged for piano duet
Eckerle Piano Duo
NAXOS 8.572881

There seems to be a growing number of recordings of arrangements of large orchestral works and most of them, like this, are very pleasing. What we may miss from the warmth and range of the orchestral sound we gain in terms of clarity and intimacy, with frequent surprises of internal musical lines we had never noticed before but which are very obviously there in the original scores. Recalling that it was through piano arrangements in the nineteenth century that most music lovers first encountered larger orchestral works we are here experiencing what they did.

The Unknown Debussy
Nicolas Horvath, piano
GRAND PIANO GP822

There are some interesting pieces on this disc. I was especially drawn to the items from Le Martyre de San Sebastien and A Night in the House of Usher – the latter from his unfinished opera. There is also a complete reworking of No-ja-li and an early version of The Girl with the flaxen hair. All well worth hearing and here splendidly performed by Nicolas Horvath.

Giles Swayne: Stations of the Cross
Simon Nieminski, organ of St Mary’s Cathedral, Edinburgh
RESONUS RES10118

I was fortunate enough to be present at the inauguration of Matthew Copley’s new organ in St Mary’s Cathedral back in 2007 and it is very good to hear it here with such an important contemporary work recorded complete. Giles Swayne wrote his Stations of the Cross between 2004 and 2005. It is a demanding work, requiring keen concentration from both performer and listener but certainly repays the effort. The pain and reality of the events leading up to and during the crucifixion are conveyed in graphic detail, with only the thirteenth station when Jesus body is given to his mother showing any sign of acceptance. The final section is constructed as a full scale Prelude and Fugue, on a Bach like model but always clearly within the style and integrity of the earlier, freer movements. Matthew Copley’s organ responds admirably to the demands of the score which is played with great sensitivity by Simon Nieminski, until recently resident organist in the cathedral.

Treffpunkt Jazz
Dizzy Gillespie Quintet
JAZZHAUS JAH 411

These are live recordings made in Stuttgart and Frankfurt, in November 1961 and are as fresh and lively as if they were recorded yesterday. They range from a brash The Mooche to the gently reflective Willow weep for me with its lovely flute solo. The audiences are obviously relishing the occasions and this carries over with ease.

Josef Suk: Asrael Symphonie
Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, Jakub Hrusa
BR KLASSIK 900188

It is surprising that Suk is still so little known in Britain. Those of us who admire his work and see its importance, standing as it does between Dvorak and Martinu, will surely welcome this fine new recording of one of his major works – The Asrael Symphony. The orchestration is masterly and the composer’s control of structure over more than an hour of development is equally pleasing. If you don’t know the work or a wider range of Suk’s compositions, this is a good place to start.

Schumann: Piano Trios Vol 1
Kingsbacka Piano Trio
BIS 2437

Vol 1 implies this will be the start of a new series and very welcome it is. The cd includes the first and second Piano Trios plus the Fantasiestucke Op88. The works have an intimacy which reflects the first years of married life for the Schumanns, and hark back to an earlier musical era – the notes suggest Haydn rather than Schubert. Warmly recommended.

Beethoven: Violin concerto & romances
Lena Neudauer, violin, Cappella Aqileia, Marcus Bosch
CPO 777 559-2

What I enjoyed about this was the lightness of touch and sense of intimacy. Using smaller forces there is an immediacy which seems to spill over from the romances into the concerto itself which is far less bombastic than is often the case.

What a Difference a Day Makes – CANCELLED

St John the Evangelist, Hollington, Concert Saturday 21 March 7.30pm

“What a Difference a Day Makes”20’s and 30’s songs and music has been cancelled due to ongoing concerns about the spread of the coronavirus. 


Please pass this message on to friends and colleagues who may have been interested in this event. We are sorry for any inconvenience this may cause but trust you will understand our decision.

Hopefully we will be able to reschedule this concert for later in the year.

ENO: Madam Butterfly

London Coliseum, Thursday 11 March 2020

Anthony Minghella’s production of Madam Butterfly has returned for a seventh time and it is a tribute to its many strengths that it appears as fresh and beautiful as it ever was. Add to this excellent singing and consummate acting, and the evening could not fail.

If Dimitri Pittas’ Pinkerton seems an outsider this is certainly in keeping with the work. He may return older and wiser but he is still from another world, unlike Roderick Williams’ world-weary Sharpless, adding to his increasingly impressive list of character parts with one of his most subtle yet. The edgy tenor of Dimitri Pittas, at its most mellifluous in the act one love duet, is a fine contrast to Roderick Williams’ rich baritone with absolute clarity of text at all times.

It was difficult to believe that Natalya Romaniw was singing Butterfly for the first time as the role fits her like a glove. No western singer can bring a visually convincing Japanese teenager to the stage but she moved us throughout with the dignity and innocence of her performance, coupled with heart-melting moments in her lyrical outpouring. Her One fine day was stunning in its intimacy with Suzuki before it opened out into a rich statement of faith.

The rest of the cast were drawn from strength with Alasdair Elliott a more up-market Goro than usual, Njabulo Madlala a sympathetic Yamadori and Keel Watson an imposing Bonze. Stephanie Windsor-Lewis as Suzuki is not given a lot to do in the production as the black suited crew move everything that needs moving. However, her voice matches Natalya Romaniw’s with ease, making the flower duet a significant moment. The chorus don’t have a lot to do but look beautiful, which they do with ease, and sang will equal beauty. The orchestra under Martin Fitzpatrick were crisp and alert, with exemplary balance given that the singers were kept to the front of the stage for most of the evening.

Anthony Minghella’s production has so many lovely moments it is difficult to pick just a few but on this occasion the lanterns in the love duet were wonderfully gentle, and the puppet for Sorrow is surely the finest way to do the child. He is on stage far longer than is normal, shows a range of emotions way beyond most child actors and never becomes embarrassing. It is masterly.

This may be the seventh revival but I suspect it will not be the last.