Mendelssohn on MullJAMES MUNRO looks at the history and wonders about the future prospects of the Mendelssohn on Mull festival, and enjoys this year’s musical offerings at a unique island event |
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| SCOTLAND’S HERITAGE is awash with legend superseding fact. William Wallace bore no resemblance to Mel Gibson; despite Shakespeare the country enjoyed considerable peace and prosperity during the reign of Macbeth ; and was Mendelssohn really inspired to compose the Hebrides Overture by the sight of Fingal’s Cave on Staffa? |
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| There is evidence that says not, but it has been obscured beneath the romantic notion. That is just as well, or we would not be celebrating poor seasick Felix’s wave-tossed melody with a vibrant annual festival of chamber music during which established stars guide young professionals out of the chrysalis to blossom as confident performers. Let the chairman of the Mendelssohn on Mull Trust, Robert Fleming, explain. |
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“The Festival was started in 1988 by the violinist Leonard Friedman, and his idea was to get young musicians away from the hullabaloo of life, let them relax in a peaceful setting and enjoy making music together. It has progressed in the intervening period and the Festival is now world-renowned, although people still just stumble across it. |
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With such an international career, Levon Chilingirian is able to meet many young musicians to bring to Mendelssohn on Mull, but he still asks the Head of Strings at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama to nominate a number of participants. However Levon says, “more often than not the people he nominates are not Scots, which shows that RSAMD has become a truly international music college. I have lots of Scots friends and colleagues in London and I am very keen for them to come, especially Ali Tait who is our cello mentor.” A leisurely breakfast in Inverness, then the journey down the Great Glen, past Urquhart Castle, Fort Augustus, Fort William and across the Ballachulish Bridge into Appin and the road works! Despite the delay, there was plenty of time for lunch in Oban before the ferry. Took a look at the menu for the seafood restaurant on the north pier, but decided someone else could help pay for the Bentley parked out the back! |
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| My delight overflowed as I sat on the terrace relishing a light lunch and a fresh coffee when a serenade of madrigals burst forth. I had chanced upon the Festival Fringe in the form of Richard Jeffcoat’s 1685 Singers. Half a dozen medieval (and I’m sure, bawdy) airs later, we were all encouraged to stroll through the castle grounds to the main hall to enjoy a couple of Dvorak piano duets and a selection of Schubert songs. |
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| By this time, my face was familiar, so I managed to get into the Aros Hall in Tobermory to eavesdrop on some of the rehearsals, and I was stunned by the virtuosity of the party pieces being put together for later in the week. The evening concert was to be in Tobermory Church, and the harbour side restaurants were busy, so I joined the queue at the fish and chip van on the pier. This is no Greasy Pete’s; this is high quality fresh-caught fish and crispy, crunchy chips, cooked to perfection. If the Michelin inspectors ever get round to rating the humble chippie, this one will get three stars! The evening performance was an opportunity for all the musicians to demonstrate to a large audience how their playing had developed since the start of the Festival. The programme opened with Gaby’s group playing their Haydn quartet, the third time I heard it in three days, and it was almost unrecognisable so much had it improved. Levon’s group reprised two movements from their Mendelssohn quartet and the two final parts of the magnificent Bruckner quintet. After the interval, it was my first chance to hear Marcia’s group, and they played one of my favourite pieces, Tchaikovsky’s Souvenir de Florence. One word says it all. Wow! That fabulous final melody was still going round and round in my head as I fell asleep that night. Thursday 5 July An early start, and the drive across Mull to Fionnphort and the short ferry crossing to Iona for a morning concert in the Abbey of a selection of the slow movements from the pieces the groups had prepared. For an island that is primarily a place of retreat and welcomes the invasion of day-trippers as a necessity, the addition of a small orchestra and the Festival patrons practically resulted in overload. But everyone was so helpful. Historic Scotland’s team at the Abbey made sure everyone was cared for, as the Abbey was packed out for the concert. The staff at the hotel were run off their feet catering for all who came in, and maintained the very high standard of their food. The clouds cleared, the sand between the toes warmed up, and the water was freezing! Truly, Iona is a little corner of Paradise. For the evening concerts, Levon’s and Gaby’s groups stayed in the Ross of Mull to play in Creich Church and Bunessan Hall. If Gruline Church was small, Creich was tiny, but made warm and welcoming by the pictures by local children which adorned the walls, reminiscent of a school classroom. My choice was to head for Duart Castle where we were received by clan chief Sir Lachlan Maclean for the concert by Marcia’s group, playing their programme for the third time. The Haydn quartet, one of his later ones, the E flat major Op 64/6, was played by the young professionals with the youngest of them all, the Swede Simona Bonfiglioli taking the lead. A teenager she may still be (just), but a stunning player nonetheless. Second violin was played by Sijie Chen, one of Levon’s students from the Royal College of Music and a string finalist in the BBC Young Musician Competition in 2004. The violist was Emma Stevenson, a final year student at RSAMD who has already been heard in the ranks of the Scottish orchestras. Her Glasgow colleague, Barbara Misiewicz, filled the cello chair. By this stage in the Festival the quartet was well played in, and it received a vibrant performance. For the Mendelssohn piece, his supposed Op 81, the two mentors, Marcia Crayford and Alasdair Tait were joined by violist Jessica Beeston and Simona moved to play second violin. The work was never written as a quartet, but was four individual pieces cobbled together by his publisher after Mendelssohn’s death. They comprised two of his last works together with earlier compositions. The Main Hall of Duart Castle was packed to capacity for this concert, but during the interval everyone had the chance to enjoy Sir Lachlan’s generous hospitality. In the second half, the group came together to play Souvenir de Florence. Twice in as many days! My cup runneth over! |
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| Friday 6 July The Friday of the Mendelssohn on Mull Festival is party day. The groups have all played their regular programmes three times in varying venues, and individually the young professionals have also been rehearsing their party pieces for the Classical Ceilidh. But first it was time for Maggie Miller and her team, Marian, Heather and Rose, to show the achievements of the local youngsters that they had been coaching during the week. The Aros Hall was filled with justifiably proud parents as both as an ensemble and as soloists these stars of the future took their early steps of public performance. Well done to Dougie, Amy, Rebecca, Georgina, Melissa, Alex, Charlie, Poppy, Nicola and especially to the wee scene stealer, Scott. The programme was varied, from Cielito Lindo to Ye Banks and Braes, from Stir Fried Centipedes to the Merry Widow. It was a charming afternoon. Come the evening, it was time for the more adult musicians to strut their stuff in the Aros Hall, a highlight of Mull musical life. Whoever said that classical players were too serious needs their head examined. There was standing room only in the hall as individually and in groups all the Festival participants demonstrated their worth. It was more than an evening of exquisitely played Mozart duets or Kreisler lollipops. There were songs from the 1685 Choir, there were musical tricks, there was sheer magic, there was a thrilling arrangement of the Shostakovitch Octet, for eighteen strings. There was a last example of the eccentric nature of the week for those who strolled out onto the waterfront of Tobermory bay during the interval. Festival Friend Geoffrey Burford, impeccably dressed, had spent the day in mass preparation so he could serve up a delicious selection of dainty canapés and glasses of chilled fizz from the back of his car. Delightfully bizarre, but totally in keeping with the spirit of the Festival. And finally, there was the after-party party in the bar of the Mishnish Hotel (of which maybe the least said the better). Saturday 7 July The last day of the Mendelssohn on Mull Festival, but really one for packing up and making it back to the mainland, which is where the Festival trustees like to ensure that the word is spread. Ferry timings dictate that Oban and Lorne residents are denied attending concerts on the island, unless they can find a bed for the night as well. So for the Saturday evening the Festival takes over St John’s Cathedral in Oban and plays the highlights of the three programmes, plus the Shostakovitch Octet, for the benefit of the locals. By this time, everyone was more than familiar with the programme and the result was phenomenal. All that was left was the late evening drive back up the Great Glen, and to slowly come down off Cloud Nine! Whoever said “the best things in life are free” must have had the Mendelssohn on Mull Festival in mind. Leonard Friedman established it to develop young musicians rather than to provide a series of concerts for the people of the island, and so the tradition has become well established that admission to the performances is free. Getting out is not so easy as there is always someone rattling the collection box, with good reason, and I should doubt that anyone would resent dipping into their wallets. Nonetheless, much of the time of Chairman Robert Fleming and his fellow trustees is taken up with fundraising, and there are several charitable foundations without whose support the Festival would flounder. Then there is an active Friends of the Festival organisation who provide both financial and practical help. But public sector funding is thin. The educational programme for the children is supported with some money from the Scottish Arts Council, and some publicity is provided by Argyll and Bute Council. |
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It is no secret that the budget for the Festival is in the order of £50,000 which, to me, seems remarkably little for a week of fabulous music, from people of many races and countries, brought together in friendship and harmony, playing for an audience of which at least half holiday on Mull specifically for the Festival. When the parallel was drawn that £50,000 keeps our forces in Iraq for approximately fifteen seconds, Robert Fleming gave a wry smile and remarked “Unfortunately the Exchequer does not work that way”. |
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16 Mar 2010 | |
09 Mar 2010 | |
19 Jan 2010 |
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March 2010 Editorial |
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