Our Ornette-enacting duo was in the afternoon and the evening was something completely different, although playful and rhythmic as before, if from another era. This was four harpsichords playing Bach and more at Wesley with a string quintet accompaniment. The promise of John Ma the Wednesday before. The main work of the day was the final piece, Concerto for four harpsichords Amin BWV1065. This was not nearly so well known as BWV1060 and BWV1062, played by two harpichord pairs earlier. Thees had us just beating and beaming with grins in our seats. They are hugely popular, played with gusto and many smiles, and a joy to all. Other pieces were an overture-suite La Bizarre Gmaj by Telemann and a Sonfonia no.4 Amaj by Solnitz. This second was somewhat obscure and to add to confusion was played attacca into BWV1065 which ended the peformance. We'd heard so much, with so much joy, so much attention and screeds of notes and love that I was surprised to see my watch showed only a one hour concert at the end. But with Bach one hour can be eternity (in a good way). All that intricate and playful interaction between parts, those falling sequences and quaver to semiquaver accelerations are such joy.
Harpsichord divas was a performance at Wesley by Arianna Odermatt, Callum Tolhurst-Close, Marie Searles and Marko Sever (harpsichords) with string accompaniment comprising John Ma and Lauren Davis (violins), Brad Tham (viola), Clara Teniswood (cello) and Hayley Manning (bass).


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