Monday 26 November 2012

Royal Albert Hall

On the 13th of November, I was lucky enough to play in an ensemble at the Royal Albert Hall in London as part of the Music for Youth School Proms. It was quite an experience.

The ensemble in question, "Fourtissimo" Percussion Quartet, played first of all at the Huddersfield regional MFY event. Following that we qualified for the Birmingham National MFY event, where we received an award for outstanding rhythmic ability and musicianship. In August, we were invited to play at the Royal Albert Hall for the final event of the MFY festival.

Fourtissimo at MFY School Proms
(L-R Me, Tom Pritchard, Jake Brown, Sophie Smith)

The event was fantastic, an amazing range of instruments and genres of music, all performed by extremely capable young people of all ages up to 18. We were lucky enough to see a full symphony orchestra, an Indian music trio, a 600 strong massed choir of young people from Huddersfield and many more different acts.

Our performance felt awesome. Everything clicked in such a way that we knew nothing could go wrong... Well, aside from Jake Brown playing his djembe a little too aggressively and puncturing the skin. (See below) But this minor slip happened in the last 5 bars of our first piece, and in a venue as big as the RAH, who was to know?

Jake Brown's Djembe

All in all, the whole experience was one that I won't forget. We only played for 10 minutes, but that doesn't matter. It could have been 10 seconds and it wouldn't have mattered! It seemed bizarre to just go back to RNCM the next day and continue with college work, but life goes on!

Alasdair

Monday 5 November 2012

Ireland and Ensemble Week

Last week and the weekend before were extremely busy for me, but great fun.

My journey started on the Friday night with a long trek to Cork in Ireland for the Cork Jazz Festival with the New York Brass Band. We stayed for 3 days and in that time were made to feel extremely welcome by the locals. During our time in Cork we did a lot of playing, including some street performances, a couple of on the street stage sets, and a few venues in the evenings! All of our playing was well received by locals, tourists, and visitors to the Festival.

New York Brass Band in Cork


As well as doing a lot of playing in Cork, we were fortunate enough to go and see a couple of the jam session happening on the Saturday and Sunday nights. With such a high number of famous Jazz Musicians in the area all at one time, it was inevitable that we were going to see some of them, it still didn't stop us being shocked by the sheer amount of talent in the room at one time during the jam sessions! Some of the guys we saw play include Roy Hargrove and Chris "Daddy" Dave, yeah, so we were maybe a little bit starstruck.

After the long journey back from Ireland on the Tuesday, it was straight back into stuff at RNCM on the Wednesday. I came back to a week called ensemble week where all of the musicians across the first and second year of my course were split up into 8 bands and told to learn 10 songs in a short period of time. We had to prepare the songs for a performance on the following Friday (a week after receiving the repertoire!) where the songs we would play were selected at random by the Course Directors.

The whole experience was an interesting challenge! Firstly because the 10 songs were contempary pop / dance songs with an extremely high level of production, thus making them notoriously difficult to perform in a live environment. For instance, I had to experiment with bass effects and different playing techniques to recreate the sounds on the recordings! As another part of my role, I had to sing some backing vocal lines.

So following a grand total of 10 hours rehearsal with my band (4 of those to make up for the fact that I was in Ireland for the first 2 days of structured rehearsal of the week itself...) we played on the Friday and all came off stage with a sigh of relief, but in the knowledge that we had done a good job, despite limitations caused by me.

All the other bands' performances were great as well! But it's a standard that I have come to expect of the people on my course who are all extremely talented. I think that the whole ensemble week experience was beneficial in helping us meet the second year students on the course, but also in working hard to prepare a large number of songs in a short space of time effectively from scratch.

A busy week, but a great week.

Alasdair