Joan Wright performing Andrew Ford’s Dark Side, THNMF 2011 photo © Brad Serls |
The first work for the evening was Andrew Ford’s Dark Side for solo double bass, performed by Joan Wright. Inspired by the vocal stylings of Bing Crosby, the double bass is amplified to make the intense murmuring noises of the lower register more prominent, positioning noisy string whispers against dark melodies that wind around one another. In a technically flawless performance Wright coaxed subtler nuances from the instrument and their musical implementation was interesting. However much of the piece seemed to be fairly static, always changing but not really feeling like it was developing. While the use of stasis can be a perfectly legitimate tool for musical expression, it didn’t seem to be the point of this work. Nevertheless Dark Side was a good start to the concert, engaging the audience with its emphasis on the subtle elements of the instrument.
Any momentum the concert had at this stage was swiftly halted by an overly long introduction to Charles Ives’ Piano Trio. While pianist Myron Romanu is to be commended for trying to communicate Ives’ complex musical language to the audience, his excessive detailing of each borrowed melody line and motif, and self-evident outlining of interactions between instruments made for a sluggish start. The performers themselves only really seemed to warm to the music halfway through the second movement, after which the piece really took on some life as interaction between musicians emerged. An ensemble performing the music of Charles Ives at its best captures both the distorted beauty inherent in the composer’s highly dissonant harmonies and the delightful emotional schizophrenia in his grotesque manipulations of popular and folk music. There is a strong place for Ives’ work to be performed by contemporary chamber ensembles such as Etica, but the full effect of the work can be lost when the music is only partially realised.
Philip Everall perfomring Nigel Westlake’s Onomatopeia, THNMF 2011 photo © Brad Serls |
Etica concluded their performance with a large ensemble work written by Perth composer James Ledger. Mean Ol’ World draws on blues motifs and attempts to transpose the form’s associations with despair and loneliness to the context of the modern chamber ensemble. Etica performed the material well, the work was sweet and accomplished and yet unchallenging.
This was always going to be a difficult performance for Etica in the context of the Totally Huge New Music Festival. The ensemble was coming off the back of three nights of inspiring concerts by Speak Percussion, Mark Gasser and Anthony Pateras that featured accomplished showcases of new Australian works as well as other challenging pieces from the 20th century. By comparison, Etica’s programming for the evening didn’t seem to have quite the same level of cultural significance. There is certainly a place, even a need, for an ensemble such as Etica in the Perth music scene, and the work they program appeals to a dedicated audience, but in the context of a Totally Huge New Music Festival, it seemed a little out of place.
Totally Huge New Music Festival 2011: Etica presents Twilight; Jon Tooby (Music Director), Semra Lee (Concert Master), Alex Brogan, Jenny Coleman, Philip Everall, Leanne Glover, Robyn Gray, Shaun Lee-Chen, Myron Romanu, Eve Silver and Joan Wright; Studio Underground, Perth State Theatre Centre; Sept 18; http://www.tura.com.au/totally-huge-music-festival/about
Sam Gillies, a composer and sound artist residing in Perth, is currently in the final year of a Bachelor of Composition and Music Technology degree at WAAPA [Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts]. His compositional focus revolves around the use of laptop processing to manipulate and add complexity to acoustic instruments, while also actively composing works for installation, film, dance and theatre. He is one of three presenters on public radio RTRFM’s experimental music program, Difficult Listening.
© Sam Gillies; for permission to reproduce apply to [email protected]