Friday, July 12, 2019

Talking to British choral conductor Joanna Tomlinson

Photo courtesy Joanna Tomlinson

On June 17th 2019 I met with choral conductor Joanna Tomlinson in Sirolo Italy, where she was running a Lacock workshop for choral singers. Ms.Tomlinson lives and works in London.

PH: Joanna Tomlinson, you are a soloist, conductor, consort singer and teacher. Where do you see your focus in all these disciplines?

Joanna Tomlinson: Primarily as a conductor now, but that hasn’t always been the case. In my postgraduate studies at the Royal College of Music I trained as a singer and, for a few years, saw it as my career combining professional choral singing with solo work in oratorio and opera. But the bug for conducting has taken over more and more over the last few years and it really is what I enjoy most, I think possibly because of the immediacy of seeing the enjoyment when working with amateur singers, actually. You get that reward with your audiences to an extent, but there is something really wonderful about working with amateur singers and seeing how happy they can be when they work something out or enjoy the musical meaning in what you are introducing them to. Choral singing can be life-changing for people and I have seen it so often in choirs, with people finding friendships or a partner or that choral singing can really help them in their lives. It is seeing that close at hand that I love so much, as well as the fact that every aspect of choral music has probably been my great love; I get to do all of it, from early small-scale works to big, grand oratorio work with orchestras - a lovely variety.

PH: Do you not work with professional singers?

JT: Very occasionally I get to conduct professionals, though I do not work with a professional group on a regular basis. That is something I might like to do further down the line. Financially, it entails a big effort to make a professional choir work, with fundraising and finding grants. But I do enjoy working with good amateur singers and it is easier to make that model work, with people paying a subscription.

PH: What are your earliest musical experiences?

JT: Music was in our family from a very young age. My mother’s sister was a professional viola player and was involved in the historically informed performance movement in its early days, playing with such groups as the Academy of Ancient Music. She was also principal viola of the London Mozart Players and worked as a soloist as well. And then at Christmas, the family would be around and we would all play instruments or sing. My aunt would play the viola or accompany on the piano and there would be a lot of music going on.

PH: What form did your early music education take?

JT: I started the recorder very young, as many children do. There was a wonderful headmistress of the school at the time, who said to my mum that I should have a go at the violin. So I started learning the violin and was encouraged in that, but it was the singing that I really wanted to do later on. I joined the local church choir at age ten or eleven and really loved the choral singing, quite quickly learning to sight-read in that situation. Having come from the violin, sight-reading came quite naturally to me. When I was thirteen or fourteen, there was a singing teacher at my school who came and did some demonstrations. I just went up to her and said I wanted to have singing lessons. My poor parents were already paying for other music lessons and now there were singing lessons as well. The singing quickly became what I loved most, though I kept violin, recorder and piano going right up to the end of school.

PH: Did you go to a music school? 

JT: No. But, for 6th form, I got a scholarship to Bedales School, an interesting, quite artistic school, though I actually did maths and physics with music for my A-levels. But there was a lot of music going on at Bedales and the head of music at the time - Nick Gleed - was a keen organist and harpsichord player, so the early music I was into with recorder playing found great camaraderie with him, with lots of Baroque sonatas and such works.  That was wonderful, but I also got very involved with every aspect of music-making there, also doing sound work for theatre. Doing maths and physics, I had toyed with the idea of studying sound engineering. But Nick encouraged me into going for a straight music degree first before specializing, which was really good advice. Actually, after finishing school, I stayed on at Bedales for a year, teaching in the junior school.

PH: So, to your university studies.

JT: I did my undergraduate degree at Bristol University. There, I was playing the recorder and violin reasonably seriously to the end of my music degree and had to use my piano skills but did not carry on with lessons.in that.  You just can’t practise all those things once you go more into certain things. Even practising singing and conducting is enough! I did my post-graduate degree as a singer at the Royal College of Music. But, in between, I had a bit of time working in arts administration, working for Askonas Holt, an agency representing artists. The job gave really good insight into that world. I also did some work at the Barbican Centre in marketing before starting postgraduate studies. 

PH: What did you do following your postgraduate degree?

JT: I landed some work teaching singing at that point. That would have been harder to go into if I hadn’t had the experience of that year of teaching at Bedales. This gave me the stability of having two days a week of a regular job so I could surround that with my freelance singing at the time.

PH: Let’s talk about the present. What are your various jobs at the moment?

JT: I run the Constanza Chorus, which is a choir I set up ten years ago...with my mum, actually. I was just getting going with the conducting then, having done a little at university when doing things related to singing teaching. My mum basically does all the administration, but is just about to stop doing that and pass the job onto a committee. The choir has really thrived. Our 10th anniversary concert happened just a few weeks ago and I was very lucky to get to conduct the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment in the Bach B-minor Mass with fabulous soloists at Cadogan Hall. The choir - 130 singers - really makes a wonderful sound; a lovely group, based in the City of London. The name refers to Constanze, Mozart’s wife, the reason being that the first concert we did was Mozart’s Requiem. And Constanze was a fine singer and I wanted the choir to come from the point of view of having good vocal coaching. The other choir I conduct in London is the Whitehall Choir, which I have now run for two years. I took over from Paul Spicer, who had been doing it for 17 or 18 years. It is a choir that is very much open to everybody; a good mixture of people: about half the choir is in the public sector in some form or another. A smaller choir, their optimum number, which we have now reached, is 70-ish. Not a chamber choir, but it needs to be that size because they do a concert at St John’s Smith Square every year and you can’t get more than 70 plus orchestra in there. I really enjoy that job, actually. Being half the size of the Constanza Chorus, it means one can do more chamber-sized works as well as slightly bigger stuff. They really take to Handel and Bach and that kind of music. My first program with them, which I had inherited but really, really loved, was Handel’s “Joshua”. Then, on Wednesdays, I work with the Farnham Youth Choir in Surrey, which is a really excellent upper voice choir. My predecessor was the founder, David Victor Smith who, with his wife, had run it for 30 years. They stepped down three years ago. That was a very interesting project for me to take over because it had to go from being something that was really founder-led to where all the administration and overseeing do not need to be done by the music director. So, we have made the transition to having the choir run by a committee with an operations manager. But I am the artistic director. That job has taught me a lot about the business side. In the main youth choir - secondary school age 11 to 18 - there are about 45 upper voice singers. The boys leave when their voices change, a bit of a hard thing to deal with, but that’s how it is at the moment. We have two junior choirs which I don’t conduct but I oversee. The littlest choir has about 35 six to nine-year-olds; the middle choir has a similar number of nine to twelve-year-olds. So we have well over a hundred children.in the organization and we are trying to expand a little bit. They do sing well. We are about to take the main youth choir on two tours this summer - one to Gothenburg, Sweden for the European Choir Games and we have also been invited to sing John Rutter’s Mass for the Children in Sion, Switzerland. Under my predecessor, the youth choir sang on the premiere recording of the Rutter piece. The youth choir has traditionally taken part in a lot of competitions and done very well in them. They perform everything from memory and sing a wide range of repertoire from Hildegard von Bingen right through to works written last year, pop arrangements and jazz arrangements...and everything in between, like Schubert and Duruflé, a really mixed secular and sacred repertoire. They are a lovely group. Those are my main regular choirs.

PH: Do you take on one-time conducting jobs?

JT: Yes. Such as the Lacock course I am conducting this week at Monteconero and quite a lot of workshops - like come-and-sings - and I also get invited to do some vocal coaching work as well with groups. I have stopped teaching in schools but I do some private singing teaching and some private conducting teaching. I do some teaching for the Association of British Choral Directors, an organization that offers courses to absolute beginners through to advanced courses.

PH: You sound very busy. What about your own singing nowadays?

JT: I keep the singing going, though I just don’t have time to do any opera contracts these days. (My opera work included bits and bobs, more chorus work, but the odd solo. I did a couple of seasons of “Opera Holland Park” some years back.) I do some choral work; primarily I sing with Sonoro, a professional group that my husband Neil Ferris conducts. Occasionally, when I have time, I go into other groups: I have done a fair bit with the BBC Singers and have worked with the Gabrieli Consort and other ensembles over the years, but it is just getting harder to juggle that in now that the conducting work is quite regular. Still, it is nice to do an oratorio as a one-off day. It is good to get to the point that you can trust there will be enough in the diary...as long as one engagement doesn’t clash with other activities. Earlier in my career, I used to get so frustrated when that happened! Actually, I had a lovely project recently chorus-mastering a really beautiful new piece by Howard Skempton. I was preparing the chorus for Glyndebourne and it was an amateur chorus of women and children. It was a piece about motherhood. Sheila Hill wrote the text. It was an event of a recent Brighton Festival.

PH: Where do you stand regarding the early music authentic performance movement?

JT: Well, I think it is really important that we inform ourselves as much as possible, read and educate ourselves about stylistic things. It is something that has interested me a lot. In my undergraduate studies I wrote a dissertation on French Baroque ornamentation. I think sometimes people take things they read and interpret them in a way they choose to interpret them. They perhaps take things too far and can be militantly obsessed with how “it should be” and that their way is “authentic” and that it can’t be any other way. I think there can be a lot of snobbishness in the early music world about things like vibrato in the sound. When we sing well, when everything is coordinated well, there is likely to be vibrato happening naturally. The trick is probably to book singers who have less weighted voices and, therefore, the vibrato (if they are singing freely) will be rather more imperceptible, with a smaller oscillation. To try and constrict singing can be dangerous and actually really affect the tuning negatively. I’m all for freedom of breath and freedom of singing expressively and with phrasing without tightening everything to make a slim sound. Blend can really occur when vowels are matching and everyone is singing well. You don’t have to blend by constricting. I think perhaps some people misinterpret that.  I love authentic playing. I love hearing period instruments played well. I get the impression that players are getting better and better. 

PH: You are also involved in contemporary music. Do you see it as a special field of yours?

JT: I enjoy singing contemporary music but I wouldn’t call myself a specialist in anything other than choral music generally. I am more a choral specialist than an orchestral specialist. But I do like to keep my options open and do a bit of everything. I have always been like that, with violin and recorder and piano and singing, loving Baroque music and modern music. As I have got older, I have become more open to everything as well...less snobbish about certain things and seeing the value in everything. Music has value if it is well crafted. It is worth exploring everything and I like to try and keep an open mind.

PH: Do you write music?

JT: Occasionally. I used to do more. I have written the odd piece for my choirs and arranged the odd thing for them. Not that much nowadays. It’s something I would like to do more of in time.

PH: Do you write about music?

JT: No, other than program notes, which obviously is a conductor’s job we have to do a lot. I have recently become a co-editor for “As You Sing”, an upper voice collection for Oxford University Press, which my husband Neil and I were invited to compile to include works of living composers. We didn’t have to write very much; we did an introduction. I enjoyed doing the writing for that, actually, very much an editor’s eye. With the OUP editor we were commissioning works or asking composers if they had works that fit the criteria we were after for the book. There are nine pieces - works by such established composers as Cecilia McDowall, Sarah Quartel, Kerry Andrew and Oliver Tarney and others now starting to get published.  Michael Higgins is just now starting to be published by OUP, partly because we introduced his music to them, which is really nice. One piece is in two parts; most are in three (SSA), with one or two in four or more parts. We really want the book to be used by young people, mostly teenagers, and by women’s choirs.  Women’s choirs are very popular in the USA and I think they are starting to be more popular in the UK. We wanted the texts to be appropriate to both children’s choirs and women’s choirs. Nature seems to feature a lot; we didn’t want the texts to be too romantic, patronising or childish. It has been collaborative and really interesting and has taught me a lot about why I pick a piece or don’t choose to work on with my choirs, really analysing what works in choral writing. 

PH: Would you like to talk about your future plans?

JT: As I mentioned before, there are the two overseas tours with Farnham. In the Autumn, my Whitehall Choir is singing “Messiah”. Everyone thinks they know it well. They have done a lot of Handel but not “Messiah” in the last 20 years. We are going to have a come-and-sing as well in the Autumn, really focusing on vocal technique. We will perform at St. John’s Smith Square, which is very exciting. They have a lot of people wanting to do it at that venue, so we feel very lucky to get to do it there with some super soloists and period band. And then, in a few weeks’ time, I have another come-and-sing coming up at a festival at the St Marylebone Parish Church. Sonoro, the choir I sing with has a really interesting project at the moment: it has taken six well-known pieces, including works like Tallis’ “If You Love Me” and Stanford’s “Beati Quorum” and then commissioned six contemporary composers to write a paired piece with each, using either the text or something that reflects on the original; the aim was that those pieces are not so very difficult and that amateur choirs could include them in their repertoire. We have done some really beautiful and artistic YouTube videos of all twelve pieces of the “Inspirations Project” and are about to tour various places around the UK to do workshops on them with amateur choirs and then to perform either with those choirs or separately. I hope it will be an interesting experience for them to sing alongside us. There will be a London workshop as well. 

PH: You have mentioned your work with come-and-sing events. Are they one-off sessions?

JT: Yes. People just turn up and learn a work on the day...for a bit of a fun sing-through but I try and really make sure people come away with something tangible, such as singing technique, and make sure there are one or more new ideas they can take away from the day and back to their own choirs. 

PH: When it’s not music, what interests you?

JT: Food: I like cooking and I like nice food and wine. And I have two lovely step-children. I enjoy time with them and my husband. I love doing yoga and would like to make more time for that and perhaps one day go on a yoga retreat. However, being a freelance musician doesn’t leave a lot of time for other activities.

PH: Joanna, it has been a pleasure talking to you.








Monday, March 4, 2019

Talking to Vera Vaidman about her upcoming Tel Aviv concerts of J.S.Bach's unaccompanied works for violin and 'cello


Photo: Davide Iadiccio
On March 4th 2019, I spoke to violinist/violist Vera Vaidman in Tel Aviv. Born in St. Petersburg and in Israel since 1973, Ms. Vaidman’s international career as a recitalist, soloist and chamber musician has taken her to Europe and the USA. She teaches chamber music at the Buchmann-Mehta School of Music, Tel Aviv University and violin and viola at the Har Nof Conservatory, Jerusalem. Ms. Vaidman is about to embark on a series of concerts four weeks in succession in Tel Aviv, in which she will perform all the unaccompanied solo violin works of J.S.Bach and the ‘cello suites on viola.

PH: Ms. Vaidman, playing all these works in close succession seems like a mammoth undertaking.

Vera Vaidman: Actually, I do not know of anyone else who has done this on both instruments. I played Bach's complete works for solo bowed instruments in the Bargemusic concert series in Brooklyn, New York in March 2018 (Bach’s birthday month).. The concerts received ardent reviews. I have been playing the violin works all my life and have also recorded them. Performing them again is an opportunity to revisit the works and delve deeper into the music.

PH: And the ‘Cello Suites on viola?

VV: Actually, I only started playing the viola ten years ago...quite by chance. Three pupils of mine were performing Dvořák’s Terzetto for 2 violins and viola Op.74. The violist was unable to play and I stepped in at the last minute and took her part. Playing Bach on the viola has helped me to understand the violin works better.

PH: How would you guide the listener attending the concert series?

VV: The repertoire is much broader than what one imagines it to be. Bach intended the listener to “hear” the accompaniments in his inner ear. The audience should listen out for the works’ inner voices and “hidden” polyphony. These works, going well beyond anything that had been written in that genre, were revolutionary in Bach’s time and, in fact, they remain so today!

PH: will you be playing them by heart?

VV: Yes, and with all the repeats. In New York, I had to give up on repeats due to constraints of time, but will not omit them in Tel Aviv.

PH: What is your approach to playing Baroque music?

VV: I do not come from a background of playing on period instruments. I will be playing on aluminium-wound gut strings but with Baroque bows and will engage in some vibrato - not the kind suited to Romantic music, but for timbral warmth...not to be producing a sterile sound. I suppose you could call it music on the modern violin/viola but in the spirit of Baroque.

PH: Vera Vaidman, many thanks for your taking the time to share this information and your thoughts.


Friday March 8th at 11:00
Sonata 1001, Partita 1002 (violin), Suite 1012 (viola)
Friday March 15th at 11:00
Suite 1007 (viola), Sonata 1003, Partita 1004 (violin)
Friday March 22nd at 11:00
Suite 1008, Suite 1009 (viola), Suite 1005 (violin)
Friday March 29th at 11:30
Suite 1011, Suite 1010 (viola), Partita 1006 (violin)
The concerts will take place at the Israel Conservatory of Music, Tel Aviv.


Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Talking to violinist/singer/conductor Dmitry Sinkovsky at the 2019 Eilat Chamber Music Festival


Photo: Maxim Reider
PH: I met with Dmitry Sinkovsky (Russia) on February 9th at the Eilat Chamber Music Festival (Dan Hotel Eilat) where, in two concerts of Baroque music, he featured as solo violinist, solo singer (countertenor) and conductor of his own ensemble, La Voce Strumentale.

PH: Mr. Sinkovsky, do you come from a musical family?

Dmitry Sinkovsky: Yes...well...I would put it this way: my parents were not professional musicians, but at that time in the Soviet Union, all people (my father was an engineer) received musical education at music schools. So, it was my parents who gave me my first solfege lessons. My grandmother, however, was a professor of Harmony at the Moscow State Conservatory.

PH: So you started with violin lessons at age five. Were you expected to go on to play the Romantic repertoire, etc?

DS: Oh yes. This was the typical classical way of education. In our Moscow music education, everyone was treated as a soloist, playing Tchaikovsky, Sibelius, Shostakovich, winning the Tchaikovsky Competition and things like that. Of course, this was the tradition, but, at a certain moment, I decided to find my own way.

PH: It must be quite pioneering to become an early music performer in Russia.

DS: To call us pioneers would be something of an exaggeration, because the much earlier generation, that of Alexei Lubimov (b.1944), did the real pioneering job. We are the second- or even the third wave of Russian early music players. But I am not a typical Russian early music performer. Neither is Grigorii Krotenko (here playing with La Voce Strumentale), a fabulous musician, who plays double bass, viola da gamba, other instruments; he also conducts his own orchestra and performs contemporary music, as well. We are all musicians who adore early music, coming from a strong early music background.

PH: Is early music your main focus?

DS: No. I also play modern violin.

PH: And the other players in your ensemble?

DS: We are not conservative early music performers who ignore the rest of the world. For example, I am staying on in Israel for the next ten days to perform with a dramatic theatre: it is a play in Russian about two Russian poets - Marina Tsvetaeva and Boris Pasternak and the love triangle with Rainer Maria Rilke. It’s a love story through the horrors of Soviet Communism. I am actually participating as an actor in it, a third actor who controls their emotions, who plays the violin and sings and acts a bit with them. At one stage, I appear in the play as Rilke and I sing for Marina. It’s very, very special. The performance includes music of Honegger, Bartok, Ysaÿe, Shostakovich, Penderecki (totally contemporary) and one piece by Bach. But the play is nothing to do with early music in general.

PH: Would you say a few words about La Voce Strumentale?

DS: Sure. This group was created in order to perform- and specialize in Baroque music, but we also recently recorded a CD of contemporary music written for us by Sergey Akhunov, a Russian composer quite popular now   I hope the disc will be issued in 2019. So, the ensemble is developing not only in the direction of “orthodox” early music, but it plays contemporary music on gut strings.

PH: Where do you personally stand regarding the Historically Performed Music movement?

DS: I would say it is developing a lot, now moving in the direction of perfection...which is good, which is very nice, but we have to be very careful with that; the “beauty of imperfection” is also a good phrase I often use. To me, the meaning of beauty is not only a golden, perfect column which must be a specific shape; it can also be wooden and irregular with different shapes. Beauty can be barbaric and wild or it can be sophisticated. That’s my vision on music. My vision on music is colour and emotion and emotion before all. It starts with the dream/emotion and the perfection behind them follows. We need to use technique to support the emotion. This is my concept of music-making in general.

PH: Your engagement in early music was much prompted by Baroque violinist Marie Leonhardt.

DS: Yes.  I discussed the early music scene with Marie Leonhard, who was one of my teachers. She told me that in every country early music is different. The Russian approach, of course, goes a bit more for perfection and is a little more compact and serious. But this is also somewhat a cliché as nowadays, with globalization and Internet, I no longer believe there remains any typical national school. People are born in one country, study in another, then live somewhere else; they collect all the different influences on the way. This also applies to Russia now...there is no longer a “typical” Russian style of performance. That they can’t play Bach and Handel, only Tchaikovsky because it is “in their blood”, I don’t believe any more. It has become quite mixed.

PH: Do you join opera companies to sing in Baroque operas?

DS: Yes, yes, sure. Last year I did two: the title role in Handel’s “Lucio Cornelio Silla” conducted by Dorothy Berlinger (who is also a recorder player) together with a very international cast of good singers - Anna Dennis, Kerl Fuge, Stefanie True and others. The other was Vivaldi’s “Orlando Furioso”, in which I sang the role of Ruggiero. But I am not making my sole focus on an opera career. Am trying to keep a balance between conducting projects and as a violinist and singer, without going too much in any one direction.

PH: Do you teach?

DS: Yes. I have a few students. I still have my teaching position in Moscow, but only three students at the moment. I can’t take on more as it is simply impossible with all the travel I do.

PH: Do you compose?

DS: Oh well...not really. It would be interesting to do this. It is something I keep in my mind, but it is a project that is “zipped” for the time being. I am happy with what I am doing now and where I am and there is still much to develop in my current activities.

PH: Do you edit music publications.

DS: No. I haven’t till now.

PH: When it’s not music, what interests you?

DS: I have to say that everything in my life is connected to music. I am interested in looking at violins and old instruments. I love wine...but this is also connected to music and all the arts.  Oh... but there is another interest: I am starting to fly small ‘planes. My teacher is in the United States, where I very am often as conductor-in residence of the Seattle Symphony. So that’s my hobby!

PH: Maestro Sinkovsky, this has been most interesting and enlightening. Many thanks for your time!


Meeting with pianist Grigor Asmaryan and violinist David Grimal at the 2019 Eilat Chamber Music Festival

Photo: Maxim Reider

On February 8th 2019, I met with violinist David Grimal (France) and pianist Grigor Asmaryan (Armenia/Germany) at the Dan Eilat Hotel following their recital at the Eilat Chamber Music Festival.

 

PH: We have just heard your program titled “Tzigane”, works by Enescu, Ravel and César Franck. Would you say a few words about it?

 

David Grimal: We are presently touring with this program; we have played it in Germany and France and we will play it in Taipei in a few weeks. I wanted to combine works connecting with that of George Enescu, such as the César Franck. The program also includes the Chausson "Poème" op.25, not played here in Eilat. It was Enescu’s favourite piece. He loved to play it. (My favourite Enescu piece is Sonata No.3.)  Of course, if you combine it with Franck’s Sonata in A major and Ravel’s “Tzigane” you have this Romantic- and gypsy side of music...French, Hungarian and Romanian.

 

PH: Grigor Asmaryan, you are new to this festival. Do you still live in Armenia?

 

Grigor Asmaryan: No, I left Armenia in 2000 and have been living in Germany for the last ten years, working as a répétiteur at the Hochschule für Musik Saar and performing chamber music.  Before that, I lived and studied in Paris for eight years.  I am a regular guest at the International Chamber Music Week (Thuringia), the Starnberger Musiktage (Germany) and the Olympiaregion Musiktage, Seefeld (Austria).

 

PH: And your studies, David Grimal?

 

David Grimal: Some of my studies were in Paris and then with a violinist called Philippe Hirschhorn and have played in many master classes, with Isaac Stern and “company”, but my mentor was Philippe Hirschhorn.

 

PH: How long have you been playing together?

 

David Grimal: We play together from time to time, but we work a lot together: Grigor plays with all my students. I very much enjoy playing with him. He is a wonderful musician. Sometimes you play with great names, great pianists, but they don’t listen to you. They listen to themselves. They have no flexibility so you can’t “sing” as you wish and you have no “space”. It’s a kind of ego battle on stage. Grigor is so friendly that I don’t need to force my violin to survive.

PH: How much do you discuss the music when you practise?

 

David Grimal. We just play. We don’t rehearse a lot. We don’t talk a lot. I think we understand each other very well. In music, as with human relationships, it’s what you don’t say that really matters. With music you can’t lie. I think we share some common “space” and it makes sense.

 

Grigor Asmaryan: For me it’s a miracle to play with David.

 

PH: In contrast to the bulk of the program, the three encores you played - Ferenc Vecsey: “Valse Triste”, Moritz Moszkowski.: “Guitarre” and Manuel Ponce: “Estrellita” - offered some gentle sentimentality.

 

David Grimal: Yes. Quite intentionally. I think it meets a need in audience members...some sweets.