Monday 22 February 2010

Monday 15 February 2010

Panoptikum

Just got back from the Panoptikum festival in Nuremberg, Germany. I had the opportunity to attend this children's theatre festival along with Tony and Tessa from Imaginate and Andy Manley, associate artist with Imaginate.
It was a really great experience and so useful to see so much international work for children. Of course, not all of it is going to be everyone's cup of tea but there were enough moments of real magic to make the experience a great success. The festival spans a week and uses the three dedicated children's theatres in Nuremberg plus a couple of other venues. It's fantastic to think of one city having so many venues (each with their own in-house company) dedicated to making work for children. If nothing else, it was great to see such enthusiasm for making work for young people.

We saw about 4 shows each day we were there and there are a few which really stand out for me. First up was Gruppe 38 from Denmark. They presented their absolutely hilarious show A Sonatina, which I'd seen before at the Imaginate festival about 6 years ago, but it was fun to see it again. The show tells the story of Red Riding Hood, with the heroine played by an egg (freshly laid by a real on-stage chicken who steals the show!). The grandmother is played by a potato and the big bad wolf is played by a potato ricer so I'm sure you can imagine what happens to grandma! The show is a really witty, lively take on a familiar story with lovely live music.
I also really loved the new show by Danish company Carte Blanche. It was called Shadow of Time and told the story of a woman who looks at the timeline of her own life. It's not really narrative-driven, rather an exploration of what it is to be born, to age, and to die. It's told in an incredibly beautiful visual style which the children in the audience lapped up. At times you wonder exactly how the visual trickery is being performed but it's lovely just to wallow in the beauty rather than try to unpick the technical mastery.
The Terrific Adventures of Brave Joan Woodsword was great fun. It was presented by Theater Mumpitz, one of the local companies in Nuremberg and it's also coming to our festival in May. It's a really fast-paced story about a young girl who stands up to her school bullies and borrows heavily from the story of Joan of Arc. It's really silly, over-the-top and good fun but has a strong moral message throughout which I think will go down really well with Scottish kids.
The last show we saw was the terrific Run by Kopergietery. This is one of my favourite companies in the world and it was a real pleasure to finally get to see this show as I'd heard so much about it. The piece is performed by 23 males, aged from 7 to late 30s. The simple premise is that these men are all caught up in a game/ritual/torture of endlessly marching up and down the stage. This image goes on for at least 10 minutes before finally individuals begin to break out of ranks, either stopping and staring at the audience questioningly or falling where they stand. The lines slowly dissolve into chaos with scenes of real violence juxtaposed with moments of heart-stopping beauty. In one particularly moving section individuals begin to slowly fall to the floor with exhaustion as one performer runs throughout the crowd to try to prevent them from falling. His efforts are of course more or less wasted as the job consumes him and exhaustion fills the room.

It was absolutely freezing and snowed the entire time we were there. However, it's a really interesting city to explore no matter what the temperature. I was fascinated when we visited the Nazi party rally grounds. The scale of the place is hard to fathom, even when you're standing in the middle of the huge coliseum that was built for the Fuhrer to address the crowds of hundreds of thousands or when standing in the now empty and desolate Zeppelin field. The adjoining museum puts it all into context in a chilling exhibition that stands as a testament to this city's gruesome past.

Monday 8 February 2010

Repetition workshop

The fourth workshop was to be the last in the first block. This meant that it was the last session for the pupils at Pirniehall (in block 2 I will continue to work with Preston Street, but will begin workshops at Dalry Primary). This workshop was to allow the pupils to explore music that uses repetition as a main feature. We began by discussing examples of repetition in music and sound. Some very clever examples were offered by the pupils such as: a chorus of a song, an echo, a parrot, parents shouting! and the song Shut Up And Drive by Rihanna.

The first piece of music I played was called Bare Cairo by Harrapian Night Recordings. I asked the group to listen out for what it is that repeats in this piece of music, and what else happens musically. This piece of music is built entirely on a short melodic phrase which loops throughout the entire piece. It has a distinctive Middle Eastern or Northern African sound and this was noted by several pupils. Interestingly, some children in both schools responded by dancing with their hands above their heads. Something in the music obviously reminded the pupils of this style of dancing and they enjoyed the freedom of being able to explore the sounds through movement. All the children noticed the repetition of the melodic fragment and one boy at Preston Street was happy so sing it for me. Other examples of repetition in the piece were found to be the drums and the improvised sound on an unidentified instrument. When I fist listened to this piece of music I did not consider this solo to use repetition - it is an odd melodic line that explores sonic qualities often on one note. It is a shrieking, dangerous sounding melody that caused many of the children to cover their ears. The children who considered this to be repetitive did so, I think, because of the consistency of the sound.

The next piece of music that we listened to was called Boat-Woman-Song by Holger Czukay and Rolf Dammers. This piece of music works in a similar way: there is a simple melodic fragment which loops throughout with a wavering melodic line on top sung by a woman. The piece is more complex than the first. It has an introduction of about 30 seconds of the loop before the woman enters, the melodic line of the woman is chopped up and layered, often overlapping and forming dissonances with itself, the piece progresses in this way before a choir of children enter near the end with some final new melodic material on the close that sounds like it is a guitar-like instrument. I asked the children to draw as they listened to this piece (and not to begin until they heard the woman's voice). All pupils began laughing when they heard the woman's voice but, as with the trombone workshop, quickly stopped laughing as they set about their drawings. Some interesting results from this exercise were: a drawing of a bee, a black spider web-like image with the word "woosh" written again and again around it, and lots of images of babies crying (the woman's voice seemed to conjure up this image). Unfortunately at Pirniehall one boy sat without drawing. When I quietly told him that it was ok if he could not think of anything to draw he began to cry. I think he felt a peer pressure to do as his classmates were doing. I told him that it was better for him to simply listen than to force some form of creative response.

The third piece of music was by a Scottish composer called Ross Campbell called Father We Thank You Again. This has been the most fascinating piece of music that we have listened to so far. The piece is constructed from repeated fragments of speech. The text of the title is spoken by an American man at various intervals throughout the piece. There are other fragments of text which appear again and again. The texts are played at highly contrasting dynamics, from quiet whispers to loud blares. It creates an interesting effect of layering. In the background to the text are a processed piano, a woman's voice and some synthesized sounds. However these are played as lesser important components in the piece. I asked the children what they considered to be the repetition of the piece. All stated the text. However, what followed (in both schools) was a fascinating discussion on whether this could be classified as "music". Almost every participant considered this to NOT be music. Some reasons cited for this were that there was no beat, it was only voices, and that the voices were overpowering the actual music i.e. the piano, sung voice and synthesizer. One final observation about this piece was the effect it had on one boy at Pirniehall. He began crying and when I spoke to him out of the classroom he said that this was because it had reminded him of the recent death of his grandfather. I apologised to him for selecting music which had had such an effect and asked if he would like to go back to class, which he did. This incident, while distressing for all, was fascinating to highlight the power of music on the individual. This piece of music which is quite dry, extremely challenging and considered not to be music by most of the participants had an overwhelming emotional effect on one boy.

The final piece of music that we listened to was the 2nd movement of the violin concerto by Philip Glass. The music is typical of Glass - very simple looping melodies, beautiful to listen to and quite familiar in a filmic way. I asked the class to lie down and close their eyes as they listened, hoping that this would enable a meditative quality of listening. The piece is quite long - almost 9 minutes - and, perhaps inevitably, some of the pupils struggled to lie still for such a long period. However the comments from the group at the end seemed to suggest some good listening from those who had persevered - the music was described as sad, tiring, calm, and tiptoeing.

Trombone workshop

The third of my schools listening project workshops focused on the trombone. I was fortunate to be able to bring my trombonist friend, George Murray, into the workshops with me. I think the pupils were impressed simply by George having a trombone, so having the opportunity to listen to one in their own classroom was a real treat!
I wanted to use this workshop to allow the children to consider improvisation. George is an experienced improviser, in both jazz and experimental ways. We began the workshop by listening to George play a short piece by Duke Ellington, In A Sentimental Mood. The kids listened in complete silence and were very still throughout. Afterwards they all clapped enthusiastically. I then asked George if he could play a short excerpt form this piece and the children used their sound diaries to describe the music. They could draw or write, think about colours or images or emotions. Some examples of things that were drawn are: a lonely girl on a street and some green grass. I then asked George if he could play the same excerpt using his mute. Of course, this altered the volume and the tone of the music and the kids were able to describe how the mute works and that it's similar to the mute on a tv. Some children giggled when they heard the sound at first. What is interesting is that if the children hear something which initially makes them laugh, they seem to get over their laughter when they have a task to complete, such as using their sound diaries.

I then asked George if he could play another piece of music. George and I had agreed in advance that this would be an improvised melodic piece but we did not tell the participants that it was improvised. Afterwards I began by asking if the piece was familiar to anyone. Several pupils thought they recognized it. I explained that it was improvised; that George was "making it up as he goes along". I think they were impressed that George could do this so successfully. One pupil at Pirniehall very cleverly pointed out that the improvised piece of music probably sounded familiar because George was borrowing little ideas from other pieces of music and stringing them together to make a new piece - very astute.

George then played a third piece for the group. This was again improvised and utilised various experimental techniques such as overblowing, tremolo, and singing whilst playing to achieve two notes at once. The kids listened well and found some techniques quite amusing. There is growing confidence amongst the pupils to express their opinions through movement and this was a prime example as some pupils responded to the music by gyrating and shaking their heads. Some thoughts on the piece afterwards were that it sounded like a man being chased by bees after stealing their honey, and it sounded like an accordion.

The final task of the workshop was to create a group improvisation piece. This was inspired by the Berio Oboe Sequenza that we listened to in the first week. In that recording the oboist is accompanied by a drone B natural sung by three female vocalists. I explained that I wanted the group to form a B natural drone as George improvised on top. The pupils chose instruments to produce this B natural. We had recorders, guitars, xylophones and glockenspiels, piano and singing. Interestingly, at Pirniehall only one girl wanted to sing while at Preston Street singing was quite a popular choice. We also discovered in the first group at Pirniehall that we could not have too many recorders as it was too loud and also quite tricky to maintain just one tone on that many recorders! In the first session I asked the group to adjust their volume accordingly based on the volume of the trombone. However, we quickly discovered that the pupils required more controls than this so I quickly stepped in to conduct the piece.