From the magazine

Classical music has much to learn from Liverpool

Plus: is Brahms’s C minor Piano Quartet his greatest chamber work?

Richard Bratby
Michael Barenboim and Ensemble 10:10, conducted by Domingo Hindoyan, performing at Liverpool's Tung Auditorium.  PHOTO: GARETH JONES
EXPLORE THE ISSUE 01 February 2025
issue 01 February 2025

They do things their own way in Liverpool; they always have. In 1997 the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra launched a contemporary music group called Ensemble 10:10 (the name came from the post-concert time-slot of their early performances). For a decade now, they’ve also administered the Rushworth Prize, an annual competition for young composers based in the north-west. And while classical fads and crises have come and gone, the RLPO has held its friends close and tended its garden. The result? The kind of artistic self-assurance that lets you put your chief conductor in charge of a première by a novice composer, and then call in a Barenboim to guarantee a full house.

It’s hard to imagine a piece like this winning a major prize two decades back

At any rate, that’s what they did last week, when Ensemble 10:10 premiered Danu’s Rhapsody by the 2023 Rushworth Prize winner Sam Kane. No apologetic pre-concert slots here; no fobbing off with an assistant conductor. When Liverpool picks a winner, it goes all in. This was a main season première, with a 44-piece ensemble and Domingo Hindoyan conducting. Michael Barenboim was the violin soloist in the other two works in the concert: Kareem Roustom’s 2019-vintage First Violin Concerto and – 100 years old, but still the toughest nut on the programme – Berg’s Chamber Concerto.

Kane’s piece surprised me; in fact, his programme note was startling enough. Danu is an Irish nature-goddess, who ‘encounters mythical creatures and dances with the forest’s faeries’. It could almost be a Bax tone-poem – one of those lush Celtic fantasies like Tintagel or The Garden of Fand. It sounded a tiny bit like Bax, too, but in a good way. Clarinet melodies sloped like shadows between leafy murmurs and the violins struck up a whirling reel. It all moved towards one of those crowning, gorgeously tinted orchestral sunsets that we’re supposed to think went out of fashion somewhere around 1918.

But we’re not obliged to think that way, and Kane – a recent graduate of the Royal Northern College of Music – clearly feels under no compulsion either.

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