London Viola Player, Violinist & Arranger For Hire

I might just run away to the circus

On Sunday morning I had a rather unusual musical engagement. I was in Rotherhithe, among the old dock district, in a building largely belonging to a film costume company … to audition to join Gifford’s Circus.

Not, I hasten to add, as a trapeze artist, clown or lion-tamer; as a musician. Nonetheless the role is rather unusual. Gifford’s have a touring band for each summer season; the musicians are fully part of the performing troupe, travel and live (and work at setting up and tearing down!) with the circus, and play music written and devised for the show largely within the same frenetic development stage (in late spring) as the rest of the performance.

2016’s show is going to be Western-themed, with some tongue in cheek; after a bit of advance discussion, I therefore auditioned in front of the musical director with a mandolin rendition of ‘Will the Circle be Unbroken’, acoustic guitar version of ‘Rock me Baby’ – and to show I can do technical, classical playing and read music, this Bach solo violin movement. Plus a couple of quick off-the-cuff demonstrations on request (mandolin as melody instrument; boom-chick country guitar strumming).

I make no secret of not liking auditions or performance exams, and feeling that I don’t have to; my effort is largely to avoid my nerves and distaste for the whole chilly room with one or two more or less poker-faced people situation impacting negatively on my playing. On those terms, I was fairly happy with my performance – especially considering I had a stinking cold, hadn’t had a day off in a fortnight, and had been freezing my hands off doing the video shoot the day before, but those aren’t factors an assessor can in any way be expected to factor in.

You can’t just run away to the circus these days of course; they are legit employers with rules to obey and a reputation to uphold, and competition will undoubtedly be fierce. It would be a big commitment to take on as well; I would basically do nothing else, having only Tuesday lunchtime to Thursday lunchtime off each week, from 11 April to 25 September.

So I make no guarantees and no predictions, not even of definitely accepting the job if offered. But several people will be watching for developments with interest!

Action!

It’s an irony which I’ve commented on before that the music video is the only surviving mainstream form of silent film. It certainly felt like it on Saturday 23rd, when the String Project plus special thespian and technical guests spent the day on Shotover hill making a video to the studio version of our song We can Be the Proof.

Director / producer Martyn Chalk of Chalkstar Films had planned what my sometime actor old housemate Iain would have called a ‘high concept’ video, with various pieces of real-world and digital trickery to produce an effect reminiscent of Nosferatu and its 1920s German horror kindred. Much of working on this was great fun, though miming at one-sixth track tempo, outside in an English January, dressed as if for a 1920s nightclub, can only be described as slow, chilly and requiring immense concentration!

Of course, now the shooting’s done, the real work starts. However, as a little tiny taste, check out what’s lined up to be the final shot:

Watch this space … if you dare …

Rewind

It’s been a busy couple of weeks; lots of potential material for writing but not much time or energy. That’s shifting a bit now.

So where were we?

16-18 January the Filthy Spectacula were in the studio. Specifically Ventura Soundhouse Productions at the Backstage Centre in Purfleet – a proper gem of a facility buried in an outer East London blot of council and industrial estates so unmentionable even my girlfriend, who grew up pretty much across the Dartford crossing, hadn’t heard of it.

filth album sessions 1

We got off to a bit of a sluggish start with engineer travel trouble and then the discovery that the studio we were recording in had been double-booked to Massive Attack for a pre-tour photo shoot (they were rehearsing downstairs). We intend to trade heavily on the fact that we ‘made’ them retreat before they wanted to and apologise very nicely, kebab boxes in hand (not sure why they had these when they’d brought their own catering company to look after all two of them … ).

However, we then got down to serious business. The plan had been to get bass and drums to, if possible, 10 unrecorded tracks recorded in this long weekend, and if anything else could be kept from the original takes or fitted in to the time, then that would be a bonus. We thought half of day 1 would probably be setting up equipment, particularly drumkit and drum mikes.

filth album sessions 2

In fact, we hadn’t really got into the space till about halfway through day one. Nonetheless, by the end of that day we had only one rhythm track to redo on the Sunday morning. By the end of our booked 24 hours’ studio time over 3 days, we had finished drums, bass, guitars and violin, besides guide parts.

filth album sessions 3

We worked him hard … engineer / producer Jonathan Jacobs

So where next? Well, the big things to cover for our 13-track full-length release are vocals, additional strings and mixing. So Mr E is headed back to the studio in a couple of weeks to try and do all the actual singing in a day. Then later in February will come multi-tracked string quartet and other odd bits of viola (me) and cello (Stevie Mitchell the oft-mentioned girlfriend!); a bit of keys (me again); various raucous yells that pass for backing vocals live (everyone); and then we should have the whole thing committed to tape, or rather computer hard drive.

filth album sessions 4

So I need to spend some serious time writing string backing parts, and practising the viola, which has been taking somewhat second place to other instruments lately for reasons which will become further clear as I keep posting.

In the mean time though, our bid to actually have enough money to pay for all this sends us back on the road, so please come and see us on 13 February at Jamboree if you’re anywhere near east London! Otherwise we may have to construct a wigwam out of CDs having finished the album but defaulted on our rent …

An orchestral record

The gigging band scene is becoming renowned for overdocumenting itself, with seemingly hardly a gig goes by without two or three people filming, some of them probably on behalf of performers.

Classical music is a different matter, at any level below the Proms at any rate. Very little audible, let alone visible, record survives of most of my orchestral, chamber or otherwise classical work, except demo recordings for work purposes. So it was a nice surprise to come across this, of which I was completely unaware:

https://soundcloud.com/rochellehart/symphonia-from-giovanna-darco

I’m leading the orchestra (hence my unabashed appropriation of the recording), and it’s the overture in all but name from Hashtag Opera‘s performance of Verdi’s Giovanna d’Arco last year. Enjoy!

Singing for themselves

So my most recent confirmed booking is a slightly unusual one. It’s a return to a previous job (thankfully, these are getting more and more frequent!), and one I found highly musically and personally congenial, leading the orchestra for Hashtag Opera Company. (By the way, if you follow the link, I’m in the cover photo, just to prove I’m not lying – but you can’t see much more of me than my nose alas … ) Last year, I led for their concert performance of Verdi’s early Giovanna d’Arco (Rochelle Hart, in the title role, is the main mover of the company); this March, the company, and several of the same musicians, return to the same venue for Donizetti’s Anna Bolena.

There’s a separate post to be written on Donizetti, a once aristocratic-household name who has practically disappeared from musical view while some of his peers continue to hold high status.

However, if you’ve followed the links to date, you may be wondering: What is Italian grand opera doing in a church in Clapham, unstaged, and in front of relatively budget audiences (less than £20 a ticket – not much more than a London chain cinema)? What’s the backstage situation here?

This requires some examination of opera as a subset of classical music. Opera singers have to be understood as a class somewhat apart, and opera as functioning alongside but distinct from concert classical music (even if not quite as much so as it stands alongside but at one remove from ‘conventional’ theatre, the West End musical, etc.).

Within that context then, the gap between conservatoire and Glyndebourne (or wherever) spotlight is rather huge. Relatively large numbers of singers graduate with talent, training and qualifications, only to find that there are hardly any openings within the choruses of large-budget professional companies, and the people taking them have already performed several leading roles publicly.

Necessity is the mother of invention, says the proverb (I really hope someone has at some point formed a Frank Zappa tribute act called The Necessities … ). Opera singers, finding they need experience and can’t get it working for someone else because they don’t have said experience, have taken to simply organising their own performances. It is more important to have publicly sung important roles than to have made money from doing so; but all the necessary people have to be got on board, a venue and a set of parts must be hired; the normal processes of a public performance are obligatory, regardless of likely pecuniary outcome. Given the hope that all such organisations will be transient (as the principal movers gain their coveted pro jobs), the fairest approach seems to be to split all the cash equally. Thus arrives the improbable sounding, but actually quite busy, London music underground subscene of the profit-share opera company.

I say ‘simply’. Of course organising even a concert performance of a full opera is anything but straightforward, especially using an orchestra (even a reduced one); and making enough of a profit that the sharers will come back and do the project a second time if the CV points aren’t essential to their career is several factors more difficult again. Hashtag are remarkable for still being here at their fourth (at least) performance, and showing signs of managing to be increasingly ambitious, rather than fading away in an unsurprising muddle of loss-making.

Hence why I’m trusting to the profitability of the current production. But of course, that means trusting to an audience turning up. So, please get it in your diaries now – for once, your ticket price really does go straight to the performers; and you won’t find many other ways of hearing full-length performed Donizetti in 21st-century London, I have to say!

Turn of the year

In the excitement of my new toy instrument and tool of my trade, I forgot to tell you about Friday night, which was the String Project‘s first gig of 2016 (and indeed mine).

We were third on a bill of four acts, at a very well-known regular live music night in an established venue, and crowd numbers and atmosphere benefitted accordingly, which is always good to play to! Unfortunately, the spirit of the evening appeared not to have been caught by the PA system, and we played through (I think successfully) amid feedback, inaudible monitor levels and having very little idea what was actually reaching the crowd (despite some of them being only six feet away when I stepped onto the funny little thrust stage section at the Wheatsheaf for some of my solos). The general response from people I chatted to was ‘you played really well, under what were clearly very difficult circumstances sound-wise’!

This was also our last gig with beatboxer Pieman as a full member of the band. We hope to see him back often as a guest star, but as he’s relocated to Bristol, it’s just not practical to keep him as the lynchpin of our rhythm section. He’s played a huge role in the band over the last couple of years, co-writing some of our most successful current numbers with Ben, taking some lead vocals as well as lending his utterly distinctive and fantastic mouth percussion, and giving both a cohesion and an accessibility to our sound it never had before, without us having to sacrifice the classical and ‘advanced’ elements of our musical mix. Perhaps more than anyone else, he represents the shift of the String Project from a vehicle for Ben’s compositions to an actual band.

However, a challenge is always also an opportunity. And so the next opening for the String Project is getting to grips with live sequencing, loops and programming courtesy of Ableton Live. See you in the next chapter – it won’t be long …

Getting picky

About a year back, I did a little series of posts about various bits of gear that I use. However, meet the latest addition to the toolkit:

mandolin

Isn’t she a beauty? A Gretsch ‘New Yorker’ flatback mandolin; now I’ve fitted a strap button on the neck I think this instrument can do whatever I might need, from bluegrass strumming to picking out Irish reel tunes. I’m looking forward to blooding it in performance at an audition for Gifford’s Circus in a couple of weeks. (Seriously!)

Keys

For some jobs and some applications, I end up trading quite heavily on my multi-instrumentalist credentials. So, by way of further evidence for some of the ‘additional’ skills I claim, here’s a video featuring me on keyboards, live with The String Project:

Don’t forget we have a gig tonight!

Further demonstrations

So far, my evolving demo recording set has largely focused on my violin and viola playing across various genres (though I also play guitar and bass on Love Never Changes, recorded for David Allen for a short film score).

However, my choral singing career is slowing gathering momentum alongside my various instrumental activities. And so, partly to support and application to monumental institution Deplist, the demos now also include two classical vocal items:

  • Is my team ploughing? from Butterworth’s collection of settings of texts from A Shropshire Lad – a lovely little set of songs which would probably be better known if they weren’t overshadowed by the magisterial Vaughan Williams cycle, or if the composer hadn’t been killed at an early age in WW1.
  • A pair of consecutive recitatives from Haydn’s Creation, concerning the creation of the animals. It’s a great piece, and the word-painting in some of the bass recits is just irresistible.

Enjoy!

Happy 2016!

Happy new year to you all, here’s hoping you aren’t suffering too much of a morning after today … and I think I could hardly hope to improve on the wishes of my wonderful girlfriend Stevie Mitchell:

May you have a fantastic 2016, with good health, happiness, success and lots of love.

I’ll drink to that.