Next Event:

Saturday 12th July, 8pm, 'Conversations II' as part of our series with the Irish Composers Collective. Venue TBC

 

 New Dublin Voices

Tuesday
May182010

NDV in the suburbs

The internationally acclaimed and award-winning chamber choir New Dublin Voices with their conductor Bernie Sherlock is for the first time giving a summer concert tour that will visit the commuter belt before finishing up in Dublin city centre (May 28-June 12).

 

The music in these concerts is rich and rewarding, sometimes deep and moving, sometimes entertaining or a bit mad, and sometimes just impossible to describe. The concerts will give a snapshot of what's typical for NDV, which in fact is everything: from the oldest choral repertoire to what's being composed right now, and everything in between, and of course, the famous “lollipops”!

 

The highlights include a selection of pieces from NDV’s soon to be released debut CD "Something Beginning with B”: the Barber Adagio ("Agnus Dei"), the Barber of Seville, barbershop quartet. If it starts with B…

 

In the concerts you will hear pieces from NDV’s international competitions - fantastic music that needs more airings, and more audiences. New Dublin Voices has won special prizes for the best performance of the set piece in Helsinki 2009 – a sublime Laudatio Domini by Joonas Kokkonen. In the 2010 Cork International Choral Festival the choir received a prize for the best performance of a work by a living European composer – Ben Hanlon's dancing, irrepressible O Frondens Virga. And then there's the gorgeous Salve Regina by Hungarian György Orbán with which NDV was the overall Grand Prix winners in Budapest in 2009.

 

RTÉ lyric fm supported New Dublin Voices in commissioning a new work from Enda Bates – Pauper's Lament & A Stealing Sadness – which will be premiered on this tour.

 

And there are two new pieces by composers within the choir…

 

The tour dates:

 

Friday 28 May - St Peter's (C of I), Dunboyne (7 pm – note early start)

Friday 4 June - St Paul's Church, Glenageary (8 pm)

Saturday 5 June - St Thomas's Church, Mount Merrion (8 pm)

Tuesday 8 June - St Andrew's Church, Malahide (8 pm)

Saturday 12 June - St Ann's Church, Dawson Street (8 pm)

 

Sunday
May092010

Peter Erdei's speech from Cork International Choral Festival

Peter Erdei gave this speech at the prizegiving ceremony at the festival this year:

Looking at what we have heard yesterday, we can say that one large part of repertoire – of the contemporary repertoire – has turned back from the atonal kind of choral music into a more understandable and more translatable language which will speak to the audience today. But also it goes beneath in an age where machinery is an everyday necessity in our lives. Somehow the computer age has had an input, an effect, on the composition of choral music: virtuosity, vocal excellence, spectacular vocal lines and extremely difficult rhythmic elements are intertwined with the most simple, traditional harmonies in today's choral music. And if you listen well you could witness and you could detect many choral pieces in this category.

 

It's quite clear, to find repertoire today is much easier than twenty years ago. We have the internet system, we have excellent publishers all over the globe, so to find good material is not a great problem. Yet, to find a programme which is unique, to construct a choral programme that represents the best qualities of our own choir and also represents the choral music of our own tradition, I find there have been two distinct categories this year. One category was working towards security, taking from the older periods of style and contemporary style – choral music which has already stood the test of time and it is here to stay. The language is understandable and the music is known in choral circles. This is very good because that can lead to success but also there were other choirs in the Fleischmann competition who took the initiative to construct a programme in another way, to have the innovative, to have the new, to have the one-time choral piece which might be written for their own choir, the own-time choral piece that might be first performed here in front of this public in Cork and that is very brave, but also if you have a good enough understanding of the capabilities of your own choir that can also lead to wonderful results.

 

So I would come back once again to my first sentence saying that this competition has been very high standard competition and I must say this competition has put Cork on the choral map in a very different way than the years before. If any of you were here last year I said "too many competitions in Europe" but not so many like Cork and I see again that this year's competition, because of the standard of the choirs who participated, has put Cork on the choral map in a very different way.

 

And finally, may I make one comment in regard to the fullness of this festival, not necessarily the Fleischmann competition but the Irish national competition. I have been chairing this committee for a few years continuously and I can see that out of the national competition grow choirs taking part in the premier national competition of Ireland, and out of the premier national competition grow Irish choirs taking part in the international competition, the Fleischmann competition, and having done so they take off into an international career and many choirs I have witnessed having done that and I think this is also due to the real in-depth organisation and the very well thought out programme that this competition is doing.

 

So, last but not least, the aim of the Cork Fleischmann competition is to preserve choral music and preserve quality and I think this year it has done just that. So ladies and gentlemen thank you for coming, choir singers thank you for taking part, good luck to you and keep doing what you are doing in the field and in the art of choral music. Thank you very much.



Sunday
May092010

Ben Hanlon's pieces well received at Cork

Wednesday
May052010

Great success in Cork for NDV!

This weekend we travelled to Cork for the International Choral Festival and came away with 2nd prize in the Fleischmann Competition. We were and are delighted (as you can hear on this video)! This was on top of winning two other prizes:

the rather splendid Schuman/Europe trophy, awarded to us for our world premiere performance of 'O Frondens Virga' by Ben Hanlon; Bernie also received the International Jury Prize for her 'artistic and imaginative programming'.

The full details of the results from the weekend are on the festival's website.

Sunday
May022010

On stage in Cork

NDV in Cork City Hall, 1 May 2010

Here's a picture of us on stage at the Cork Choral Festival mere moments ago, taken by Darragh Doyle or Stephanie Francis who are diligently documenting all the performances this weekend.

We sang well...now it's up to the judges...