Showing posts with label Elizabeth ball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth ball. Show all posts

Monday, 14 April 2014

Classical Kicks up Max Baillie

Max Baillie - Viola

Louisa Jones -
Man Overboard
These nights are always a gamble but not much of a risk when you have some of the best performers on your team. Violinist and musical curator Lizzie Ball brought us another episode of Classical Kicks at Ronnie Scott's late last month (30/03/2014) with a squad of the highest class, who were all ready to bring their A game to the ball.

Konstantin Lapshin - piano

Upstairs at Ronnie's is a modest affair in terms of numbers and understandably it was packed out, with punters standing and a few like myself lounging against the nearest wall. I do not know whether you can have too much of a good thing but with the promise of more quality to come Dunja Lavora's 8 tune run had me thinking too early of the future. There were plenty in the crowd though who hung on her every delicate note longer than I and it is with real pleasure that we've been given permission to publish (below) the work of poet Archie Swanson who was inspired by the night's performance.

Elizabeth Ball - Violin and Vocals
Lavrova and Ball are old college friends. Where the latter has embraced the new and expansive it is the former who flies the flag for the old school with an air of nostalgia. Alongside Konstantin Lapshin on piano they made a sweeping gentle entrance with Rachmaninoff's "Hungarian Dance" but it was the third from Rachmaninoff and Heifitz, "Daisies", which thrust the first emotive lunge into this wizened heart. If nostalgia sometimes talks of loneliness then Dunja Lavrova's playing was the thinnest of smoky wisps that rose from a wooded landscape. My eyes rose too as they slowly climbed the large flowers that embossed her dress from toes to her intense expression.

James Pearson -
Piano
Despite my earlier protestation I wouldn't have cut short Lavrova and Lapshin's performance if I was to lose their final composition, Pablo Sarate's "Gypsy Airs". In their hands it was a seduction, a tease and they dangled this gift just out of my reach. I watched Dunja Lavrova as though through a plate glass window, I on the outside, transfixed by her elegance and the spark of her crackling charm within.

Emma Smith - Bass
Lizzie Ball herself grabbed the Classical Kicks baton next alongside her quartet of James Pearson (piano), Emma Smith (bass) and Pedro Segundo (drums). It is all too rare to hear her sing and she started with "Time after Time" but it was how she finished her short 3 tune set that fired this night into life. Alongside Ball's frantic and mesmerising power it was the rubbing tapping handwork of Segundo that got pulses racing on "Libertango".


Pedro Segundo
Our third act of the evening was the pinnacle. Max Baillie stood alone, with his viola and a penchant for JS. Bach. It was a freewheeling performance of skill and charisma, one that was encircling and disorientating. If I was to describe Baillie's performance as one you drifted in and out of then you would think it an insult but this was the type of spiritual experience that kept ambushing you.


Thomas Gould - Violin
Before a joyous performance by Man Overboard we were treated to a world premiere by Thomas Gould of Tarik O'Regan's "Alice Changes", a piece written especially for the thin London born violinist. Despite being influenced by Charlie Parker's "Blues for Alice" it talked more of the unease and surrealism experienced by the  younger young lady from Wonderland.

Ewan Bleach - Clarinet
Man Overboard were an artist's delight especially clarinettist Ewan Bleach whose expression looked like he had just sucked up a Sarsaparilla through his instrument. Their second of the evening "Good Morning Heartache" was a dripping delight of melancholy washes. Despite their performance overflowing with colour it was this tune in particular who's hues of Paynes Grey penetrated our blotting paper minds.

Dave O'Brien
(Man Overboard)
Bass
Upstairs at Ronnie Scott's is perfect for flirting around and meeting new people and it was ideal for Lizzie Ball's Classical Kicks with its lyrical surprises. The new discoveries kept coming thick and fast with not only Max Baillie improv twist and turns but a poetic encounter. I finish this story with the work of Cape Town scribe Archie Swanson........

AL.




Dunja Lavrova
Bewitched
dunja lavrova
at the claret walled bar above ronnie scott's on frith street
nature has been extremely kind to you
you must have poured yourself
into your skin-tight
gilt petalled full length black dress
golden haired with sparkling gentle grey eyes
high cheek-boned
wasp waisted
young and gorgeous

you bare your soul
as you caress your beloved pedrazzini violin
konstantin lapshin stroking the keys of the black upright piano
eyes closed
mesmerised
and yes
we are all bewitched 
as your serpentine body
sways like a reed
touched by the gentlest of lyrical breezes
as you coax every gamut of emotion
from the humming strings
it’s as if the music has possessed you
yet it is we that are exorcised
freed for a moment 
from out right hemisphere driven lives
to worship
at the altar
of your craft


Archie Swanson
30 March 2014


Tuesday, 4 March 2014

Gabriella Swallow - Urban Family Picnic

Gabriella Swallow
We gathered at The Forge (12/02/2014) in Camden to join the party, to feel included in Gabriella Swallow's extended family tree and listen to a rich variety of musical collaborations. Firstly the name of the concert tonight, Gabriella Swallow's Urban Family was deceiving, this was not a mixture of rappers entwined by cultured harmonies, nor a group of feral foxed musicians who had honed their skills in the backrooms of pubs or played for door money in pool halls. This was the cream of the crop, top drawer performers brought together by Swallow herself. They came into her embrace through a desire to collaborate at the highest level and because friendships blossom in Swallow's company.

Clive Bell -  shakuhachi
Gabriella Swallow was the near constant throughout the two set night on cello. Her trademark Struwwelpeter hair was surprising indigo rather than the flame colour I had sketched before. The Forge was packed out, not a seat free and I perched to the side, frantically scribbling away. I did not sketch everyone, such was the revolving door nature of the evening.

John Garcia Rueda
It was an unusual experience playing the voyeur at this concert, with the obvious chemistry bubbling away on stage and the cohesive bonhomie it was impossible not to become a little envious. It was like watching one of those dynamic groups of young people who have thrown out their tartan blanket on Hampstead Heath for a picnic. Alive and joyful they lark about, they are bright and talented, drawn together by the knowledge that things just happen when they are in each other's company. If this concert was 20 years earlier it would have been directed by Kenneth Branagh with a small change to the title, swapping 'Peter's Friends' for Gabriella's.

Jeremy Silver - Piano
The gig opened with Clive Bell on Shakuhachi, while John Garcia Rueba gave us an energising tiple with his 12 string guitar and not forgetting Swallow (cello). A brave opening that didn't awaken the senses with a crash but piqued our curiosity and set the tone for the unexpected. There was a beauty, an emptiness, an unease from Clive Bell, a whispering wind that stretched the boundaries, making us forget that we were squashed deep in the heart of Camden rather than the expansive steppes suggested by the music.

Genevieve Wilkins
The next performer is a popular entry in my sketchpad, her charismatic beauty never fails to excite my pen but it was Sally Silver's husband Jeremy that filled an A5 page. Too short a performance as always, Madame Silver was engaging and emotive. Her expression of word and demeanour is a performance in its itself, as she gathered her hands under her chin, it was as though she was squeezing imaginary lemons into a glass perched just above her bosom.

Guy Johnston - Cello
To stretch the unexpected theme of the night even further we were treated to Andrew Ford's "Composition in blue, grey and pink" by percussionist Genevieve Wilkins. Playing on her knees as though in prayer, she was mostly shielded from our gaze by a curtain of blond hair. 5 cymbals in total rested on the floor, 2 large silver and 3 bronze dinner plates resting on a swathe of foam mattress moguls.


Lucy Schaufer
Hindemith's "Duet for 2 Cellos" was a hit with the crowd, Guy Johnston pedalling tandem with Gabriella Swallow, which was then topped off by an elevating tango. This was followed by the vocal performance of the night. Mezzo-soprano Lucy Schaufer sang  first "Errol Flynn" and then "Make me a kite" both from her recent album Carpentersville. So full of pathos and tenderness. It was a powerful bookend to the first set.

Elizabeth Cooney - Violin
The second set was a more raucous affair with a galloping effervescent pace and any number of beautiful people to train my artistic eye upon. You will have to forgive me if I have not dutifully mentioned or sketched all.

Elizabeth Ball - violin
Three duelling violinists immediately grabbed the attention. The statuesque Elizabeth Ball although relegated to the wings was piercing with her clarity and presence, while Una Palliser swayed that willowy dexterity of hers so much we felt the lash of her whip deep within the audience. Alongside Elizabeth Cooney they followed Piazolla with Bartok's "Romanian Folk Dances".

Martynas Levickis - Accordion
With his fop of sandy hair and boyish grin Martynas Levickis proved an instant hit too. Accordion players are always a welcome relief for an artist, for the instrument is a ball and chain to keep the performer relatively stationary for sketching purposes. This was not the case for Levickis' trouser slapping Lady Gaga rendition, it seemed the spirit of the unconventional pop chameleon had possessed our Lithuanian with bawdy talent. He vibrated with orgasmic pleasure as the tune hits its peak and line after line missed its mark on my sketchpad paper.

Seth Parker-Woods
Although I did catch a quick scribble of Seth Parker Woods I couldn't capture Leslie Boulin-Raulet (violin), Helena Smart, Polly Wiltshire or Zoe Martlew (Cello).

Graeme Flowers - Trumpet
Jazz was a breath of fresh air for this correspondent, with familiar faces and a powerful chest filled loudness that counteracted the previous 30 minutes of entwining strings. Graeme Flowers headed a quartet of Gareth Huw Davies (bass), James Pearson (piano) and Pedro Segundo (drums). It was a cheeky and enjoyable "Nostalgia in Times Square", Pedro Segundo's was memorable throughout proceedings, notably when the slapping of his tambourine felt like I'd wandered into a spankathon of excitable proportions.

Ian Shaw
The concert came to a close with the voices of Annabel Williams and Ian Shaw. The latter was virtually incommunicado in flat peaked cap and 'barrow boy' blue jacket. Between Shaw and Swallow it was a spirited finale with flowing peaks and a strong interaction that epitomised the collaborative ethos of the whole night.

Despite it being a fictitious vision I still imagine that I will encounter Gabriella Swallow and her urban family in one of London's grassy parks this summer, where I will set up my easel and rattle of an Alex Katz pastiche to capture their natural trendy cohesion. Perhaps I might be invited to share a gin and tonic while I let their laughter wash over me.

AL.