Wednesday, February 08, 2023

Northampton Symphony Orchestra concert

8 February 2023

The composer Malcolm Arnold - who, as I never tire of telling people, played trumpet in the Northampton Symphony Orchestra as a schoolboy in Northampton - wrote the music for many films. These included ‘The Heroes of Telemark’ - a 1965 British war film directed by Anthony Mann based on the true story of the Norwegian heavy water sabotage during the Second World War. Like many films of its era, the music commissioned for the soundtrack became the property of the film company and the parts used by the orchestra during the recording were routinely destroyed afterwards. The music from ‘The Heroes of Telemark’ had therefore never been performed live, until the Malcolm Arnold Festival decided to attempt to resurrect this classic film score. In 2017 John Gibbons was asked to reconstruct the music and spent several weeks in a cottage in the West of Ireland listening to the film over and over again to piece together the orchestral score. This was a painstaking process of detective work and careful listening - aided by a deep understanding of the way Malcom Arnold orchestrated his symphonies. John was also fortunate to discover a note in Malcolm Arnold’s archive which told him the key of the film’s main theme (as the running speed of cine film can vary, so what you hear is not always exactly the pitch the music was performed). John’s concert suite of the music from ‘The Heroes of Telemark’ was performed at the Malcolm Arnold Festival in 2017 and this week it got a second performance by the Northampton Symphony Orchestra at our concert in St Matthew’s Church, Northampton, conducted by John Gibbons. It was fascinating to talk to John about the process of arranging the music into a piece that would work as part of a concert - which involved changing the order of some of the main themes to make more sense as a single piece of music, rather than simply following the plot of the film. The music includes a typically stirring heroic Malcolm Arnold tune, lots of tension-building dissonant chords, the whole orchestra whistling innocently and a German marching band - which featured some stunning tuba playing by Nick Tollervey. It was great fun to play ‘The Heroes of Telemark’, particularly having recently watched the film on BBC iPlayer - and exciting to be part of this rediscovery of a classic film score. Our concert also featured the lovely ‘Piano Concerto No 5’ by Saint-Saens, brilliantly played by Julian Chan. We finished the concert with ‘Scheherazade’ by Rimsky Korsakov. This is the third time I have played ‘Scheherazade’ with the Northampton Symphony Orchestra (I reviewed our previous performance here in March 2012) and I don’t think it is recency bias to say this was the most complete of the three performances. The wind and brass solos were all wonderful - with Sian Bunker (bassoon), Naomi Muller (clarinet) and Graham Tear (flute) all truly outstanding. And the solo violin part was played beautifully by Emily Groom, with the haunting final high harmonic note floating, almost inaudibly quiet but somehow catching your ear throughout the closing orchestral chords. It’s a thrilling piece to play - particularly the rapid fire final movement which feels physically exhilarating to be part of. It was a thoroughly enjoyable concert.

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