Just as we might anticipate that Glenys’ visit to Malawi may have an impact on future festival content, Ian Ritchie’s experience in recent years as a volunteer worker in Bosnia will be reflected in the 2005 programme. Indeed, conflict and resolution is one of the themes in the festival programme for next year.
Merima Kljuco, from Sarajevo, now based in Amsterdam, is an accordion player who has established herself in recent years as one of Europe’s leading virtuosi on this instrument. She will be coming early to Orkney, and hopes to work with the Orkney Traditional Music Project on a programme of “enrichment and exchange”. One of her performance pieces will be a concerto with the SCO, Seven Words, by the Russian composer Sofia Gubaidulina.
Works by Beethoven and Grieg will also be included in the orchestral programme. In connection with the latter, and with the 2005 Festival’s companion theme of voyaging, a Norwegian exhibition will take place, and the very popular Sails in St Magnus, currently on show in Shetland, will hang again in the Cathedral.
Those huge and colourful sail paintings, illustrating brief texts by George Mackay Brown on the voyage of Earl Rognvald to the Holy Land, were created by Erlend Brown, Dave Jackson, Andrew Parkinson and Mary Scott for installation in the Cathedral in 1993. Ian Ritchie also mentioned a work by Sally Beamish that may be included in the programme, which is based on the great Anglo-Saxon epic, The Seafarer.
“Ian Ritchie emphasised that the core of the festival is the local community, and – again connected with the theme of voyage – he is planning to establish a songwriting project”
One seafarer who is definitely on the list for next year is the bilingual Welsh poet Gwyneth Lewis, who has been working on a book that deals with the sea voyage she made in recent times with her husband, Leighton. The voyage has had to be interrupted, unfortunately, but we hope only temporarily. Another form of exploration that she has written about is space travel. The poems in Zero Gravity (1998), which was shortlisted for the Forward Poetry Prize, were inspired by the work of her cousin, Joe Tanner, an astronaut, who worked on the Hubble space telescope in 1997. Her latest book of poetry is Keeping Mum (Bloodaxe, 2003).
Ian Ritchie emphasised that the core of the festival is the local community, and – again connected with the theme of voyage – he is planning to establish a songwriting project here, the results of which will be performed during the festival, linked together by a progress through the town.
Finally, at least for the moment (there being no news yet concerning the Festival Commissions), a very exciting and unusual area of interest next year will be the progress of a major string quartet competition, to be held in Italy during the period leading up to midsummer. The Premio Paulo Borciano is a competition that attracts huge international interest, and the competition piece for the 2005 prize will be Max’s A Sad Pavan for these Distracted Times. The winning group will be invited to Orkney to give the piece its British premiere during the Festival. They will also receive the Maxwell Davies Prize.
Many bouquets were given out in the Stables that evening, in recognition of the huge contribution the Festival receives from its volunteers. The final gift, and the final words, were in the capable charge of Festival Board Chairman, George Rendall. It was a journal for Glenys, with the Board’s sincere thanks for her year’s work, their best wishes, and a heartfelt, “Haste ye back.”
© Alistair Peebles, 2004 |
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