More views of - or before - Cambridge Film Festival 2019 (17 to 24 October)
(Click here to go directly to the Festival web-site)
4 September
Manu Delago, Jules Buckley and Britten Sinfonia
Looking forward to it 👏👏👏— Saffron Hall (@SaffronHallSW) September 4, 2020
Anoushka Shankar’s sitar awaits @ShankarAnoushka We’re live @bbcproms @BBCRadio3 @BBCSounds at 7.30. pic.twitter.com/0myQYfh5pi— Ian Skelly (@Ianskellyradio3) September 4, 2020
— THE AGENT APSLEY #ScrapUniversalCredit #JC4PM2019 (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) September 4, 2020
Also very useful to have a guide to the instruments, because typical familiarity is as the audience applauding 'the tuning' in The Concert for Bangladesh (George Harrison's collaboration with Ravi Shankar**).— THE AGENT APSLEY #ScrapUniversalCredit #JC4PM2019 (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) September 4, 2020
** Anoushka Shankar's father (who is also the father of @NorahJones).
A lively opening introduced us, with full vividity, to the sounds and the sound-production in we are hearing (including percussion from Manu Delago and Gold Panda's live electronics)— THE AGENT APSLEY #ScrapUniversalCredit #JC4PM2019 (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) September 4, 2020
->
And there's the element of seeing and hearing the finger-picking that's alongside Gold Panda's threaded interweaving of gentle or insistent riffs, looping unrealities, and almost pitchless sonic whirls : just now, setting down a ground bass for voice, with sitar as response.— THE AGENT APSLEY #ScrapUniversalCredit #JC4PM2019 (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) September 4, 2020
But now, after that Concerto of themes [full title to be noted later], ‘Wandering Around’ by and from @manudelagomusic, with @BrittenSinfonia's first participation in, at least, the aural texture - they were assuredly in the space, and active witnesses to the other performers.— THE AGENT APSLEY #ScrapUniversalCredit #JC4PM2019 (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) September 4, 2020
Jules Buckley* told us how he notated a largely oral / aural tradition in which @BrittenSinfonia are now playing with @ShankarAnoushka so that they could follow a score :
— THE AGENT APSLEY #ScrapUniversalCredit #JC4PM2019 (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) September 4, 2020
* Also excellently to be heard, at present, in stand-in mode (for Clemmie) on @BBCRadio3's Classical Fix.
At first, it takes that approach, at any rate, but we have reached another moment of calm, of sustained sound, just as - by long bowing and the effect of multiple players - a string-orchestra can lengthen a note into one continuity - as might ercussive riffs and / or electronics.
— THE AGENT APSLEY #ScrapUniversalCredit #JC4PM2019 (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) September 4, 2020
No matter, because it is in that variation in pace, tempo and timbre that all music lives and dies, and it must assuredly be Sinfonia leader @ThomasGouldVLN's instinct for playing off and with Shankar that helps inform one's ear, opening out to what's at The 2020 Proms right now.
— THE AGENT APSLEY #ScrapUniversalCredit #JC4PM2019 (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) September 4, 2020
Except that, with apologies to her, it was Jacqui Shave who was leading @BrittenSinfonia to-night ! ;) https://t.co/prWjLFiDRP
— THE AGENT APSLEY #ScrapUniversalCredit #JC4PM2019 (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) September 4, 2020
No one thing, but all the same ensemble, the same participation in a whole that is and grows because of its parts :
— THE AGENT APSLEY #ScrapUniversalCredit #JC4PM2019 (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) September 4, 2020
An orchestra, a city, a string quartet, a choir, a football-tea, its crowd - that togetherness in separation - has been here with @ShankarAnoushka in Land of Gold,
Thank you for all your lovely comments about tonight’s @bbcproms concert. If you missed it, you can catch it on @BBCiPlayer or @BBCSounds now. @bbcproms @ShankarAnoushka @julesbuckley @manudelagomusic pic.twitter.com/RKmaWpVUn4
— Britten Sinfonia (@BrittenSinfonia) September 4, 2020
Such a beautiful way back to live music-making for @BrittenSinfonia @bbcproms tonight. Serene and sparkling collaborations with @ShankarAnoushka @julesbuckley and @manudelagomusic The hang, sitar and strings is a magical combination... pic.twitter.com/2rfxMxctGW
— Meurig Bowen (@MeurigB) September 4, 2020
If you want to Tweet, Tweet away here
Unless stated otherwise, all films reviewed were screened at Festival Central (Arts Picturehouse, Cambridge)