This was a gloriously beautiful concert but that could be expected. It was called B.A.C.H. with reference to the Bach motif; it was sung by Luminescence Chamber Singers so those glorious voices and harmonies; it included violinist-cum-vocalist Anna Freer as guest while one member was off the US; it included a rendition of Bach Violin Partita no.2 Dmin with its 5 movements ingeniously interspersed with Bach chorales; it started and ended with some lively early music, amusingly for me (given I did a midi take complete with whistles on Hope / The Pots) including the crab canon over palindrome Guillaume de Marchaut Ma fin est mon commencement. I loved the violin partita and wondered over the accompanied fifth movement and admired the partita played touchingly and searchingly from memory, but what did it for me were the voices. I consider the voice the most perfect, most complex and satisfying instrument, not surprising given it is of us rather than an invention however impressive, and Luminescence do it so well. Not quite perfectly, but bloody close to. And Anna fitted wonderfully as a sit-in soprano. Those voices and harmonies were a thing of immense beauty and exploration of harmony and rich vocalisation. This was a concert to treasure. Good to see that our local ArtSound recording engineer, Tim, was there experimenting with multiple mic pairings. He does an excellent job, too.
Luminescence performed Bach and more at Drill Hall Gallery. Anna Freer (violin, soprano) joined choir members AJ America (mezzo soprano), Veronica Milroy (soprano), Dan Walker (tenor), Lucien Fisher (baritone) and Alasdair Stretch (bass). Tim Lamble recorded for the performers and ArtSound.
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