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Words, Music & Silence – The House of Life

Dates
Friday, September 29, 2023 - 17:30 to 20:30
Location
Online & South House Lecture Theatre, Arts University Bournemouth

Kindly hosted by Bournemouth University & Arts University Bournemouth

This event will be FREE.

View the livestream via YouTube.

A practice-based examination of songs and the silence that frames them.

This lecture recital will consider Ralph Vaughan Williams’ settings of 6 sonnets by Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1904). The first of these to be composed was 'Silent Noon’; singer Julia Hollander and pianist Peter McMullin will focus on this song, its relationship to the rest of the cycle and especially the theme of silence. They analyse the ways Vaughan Williams’ music depicts silence, and consider the role of Rossetti as both painter and wordsmith: calling on both our listening and our (silent) visual powers.

The live performance context is an important aspect of the event, as we witness how responsibility for noise-making passes back and forth between audience and musicians or how a pause inside a song serves the story-telling and the mood. In real time, the performers demonstrate how silence works between one song and the next, and its ultimate resonance at the end of the cycle.

About the performers

Julia is a writer and singer based in Oxford. A love of music and words inspired her first career as an opera director. In the 1990’s she was the youngest ever staff director at English National Opera, and the first woman to direct an opera at the London Coliseum. She went on to stage many more productions around the world, as well as founding her own contemporary music theatre company, Operate.

During her time as a director, she regularly visited India to work with performers there, and this eventually culminated in her first book - Indian Folk Theatres (part of Routledge’s Theatres of the World series). Subsequent books were Journey through Campsfield (a collaboration with detainees at Campsfield Immigration Centre), When the Bough Breaks (a memoir about her severely disabled daughter, Imogen), and Chicken Coops for the Soul (an inspirational memoir about the joys of keeping hens). She has written two plays for BBC Radio 4, When the Bough Breaks and The Kingsnorth Six.

Julia has been collaborating with Peter McMullin for more than a decade, presenting numerous musical events including a BBC radio documentary about her family’s escape from Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia, The Letter. Singing has always been part of Julia’s life: from Indian folk songs to Jazz to Renaissance polyphony, working as a song therapist and teacher with a particular emphasis on singing with dementia sufferers. These experiences form the basis of her latest book, ‘Why We Sing’, investigating the importance of song to our wellbeing, and charting its extraordinary influence on all aspects of our spiritual, emotional and physical lives.

Peter was born in Plymouth and grew up as a pianist and, later, a jazz musician, playing saxophone in a variety of Plymouth-based bands and the Devon Youth Jazz Orchestra. After completing a BA in Music at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University in 1985 he pursued a career in book selling with Blackwell’s and is still their renowned Printed Music Specialist, winning two major industry awards in 2004 and 2011. Outside this role he has a rich and varied life as a musician focussing primarily on collaborative work in a wide variety of genres. He is also a singer and conductor and is much in demand as an exam coach. Past projects include performing a large array of avant-garde and electro-acoustic music with The New London Chamber Choir. Work with Arcadian Opera in Buckinghamshire has seen him on the production team for Faust by Gounod, L’Elisir d’Amore by Donizetti, Romeo and Juliet by Gounod and The Wreckers by Ethel Smyth.

Contact us

Literature and Music Research Group
The Open University
School of Arts & Humanities
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Walton Hall
Milton Keynes, MK7 6AA

Email:
Delia da Sousa Correa
Robert Samuels