Tony Dudley-Evans used to
do the programming for the Arts Centre during the Festival and, since his
retirement, he awards a commission each year for music to be performed at the
Festival and this year the funds have supported Olivia Murphy and her Orchestra.
Siren Cycle, a newly composed work, sees a feminist fable wearing the clothes of ancient Greek myth and all wrapped up in a musical setting that ranges across styles, scattering remnants of boundaries in its wake. Thankfully, we are handed a booklet that contains the libretto, a list of the musicians and illustrations by Murphy’s sister, Darcy, on the way in. The story features 4 young sisters, the sirens, raised by the sea on a distant island. When one is kidnapped by the selfish sea, the others set out to find her encountering muses, Gods and a bored and wicked sorceress on their travels.
As the story progresses
the voices play both the sisters and the Greek Chorus, slipping easily between
the roles. (Having the words in front of me helps). Murphy layers the music in
waves, organically pulsing as she layers the music, folding it on itself.
A blonde sorceress with a
wicked laugh is portrayed by a trumpet, spitting out her contempt and cynicism;
she’s a good baddie of the sort that every myth needs. She is greeted by
discordant thumping chords and oblique runs on the piano and the full band
confronts her with Murphy conjuring up the elements for a storm at sea. A
reflective clarinet solo allows the sisters rest as they lament the lost ship.
The lost sister hears
them and the excitement rises with the bass pulsing and driving the Orchestra
as the drums and bass, and the tenors and strings lead on. A rousing full
orchestral chorus fades away as hope wins through before a sisterly reunion
brings a closing blast.
The whole piece has been
a work of extraordinary imagination and I’m impressed by the vision to marshal
all these different voices to tell, what is itself, a very imaginative story. I
always think, with some regret that the problem with commissions for festivals
is that the music gets its moment in the light, often at a single performance,
and then is heard no more. I hope that Siren
Song gets another life beyond its hour at Cheltenham.
There is loads more Olivia Murphy, including videos of her other groups and projects, on her website at oliviamurphymusic.com. Dave Sayer
No comments :
Post a Comment