Free online new music listening club: Hannah Kendall

Temi Salau

Sound and Music news
Share this page
FacebookTwitterEmailLinkedInShare
Image credit:
@ New York Times
Deadline:
Type:
Share this page
FacebookTwitterEmailLinkedInShare

Our online listening club is held monthly from 7-8pm on the last Friday of the month, and is a chance to come together regularly to listen to new music and find out more about a selection of contemporary composers.

We will invite a variety of different guest hosts who will explore the music of a new contemporary composer each session. You’ll be invited to spend some time listening to one of the composer’s works before we meet, but there will also be an opportunity to listen to the work during the session if you don’t get around to it beforehand.

Like a book club but with less homework!

For this month’s listening club we’ll be exploring Hannah Kendall’s ‘Verdala’

 

“The Verdala was one of the ships that brought the British West Indian Regiment from the Caribbean to Europe to fight in World War I. Already knowing that I wanted this piece to highlight the BWIR’s involvement in the war, and thinking about titles around the time that the 2018 ‘Windrush Scandal’ surfaced, it seemed fitting to name it so, as a reminder that there have been many ships long-prior to Windrush interweaved throughout British and British-Caribbean history.

I have been particularly drawn to the writings of Caribbean/Guyanese poet and political activist Martin Carter for many years, who expressed his feelings of the British-Caribbean experience, and military presence through powerful and poignant imagery in his texts. Lines from his ‘O Human Guide’ inspired the musical material for ‘Verdala’: ‘In the burnt earth of these years…So near so near the rampart spiked with pain… The guilty heaven promising a star…Each day I ride a wild black horse of terror…’

Intricate interweaving woodwind lines feature throughout, often punctuated by strong raw chords in the strings, recurring chimes in the harp, and initial beating from the claves. Highly direct and rhythmic activity dominates following the opening section, which foreshadows this, except when biting ‘jabs’ give way to a softer, quieter ‘chorale’ in the low woodwinds and brass, before building-up again, becoming more unsettled, and culminating wildly and piercingly.” – Hannah Kendall

Share this page
FacebookTwitterEmailLinkedInShare
Share this page
FacebookTwitterEmailLinkedInShare