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11:15am Friday 9th May 2008
THE university's Spring Festival Of New Music jumped into life on Tuesday, with a bracing song recital from an established duo.
James Gilchrist's intelligent tenor drew added spice from Alison Nicholls's nimble harp in an evening devoted to recent English song.
It got off to almost too good a start. Alex Roth's Romantic Residues sets nine poems by Vikram Seth, recollecting amatory encounters, successful, unrequited or imaginary. Roth's light-fingered treatment seemed to distil the poetry's whimsy to a tee. The duo coloured its humour precisely.
They showed an almost equal empathy for the clean-cut folkiness of Howard Skempton's Three Songs for Jennie, to mixed texts by Bromsgrove poets. Nicholls had the spotlight to herself in Birtwistle's Crowd (Celtic lyre) and made the most of its sharp accents.
Only two-thirds of Jonathan Eato's ambitious new Bright Blades and Heart Grey, six Paul Celan poems translated by Michael Hamburger, were heard here. Eato's inspiration was a flamenco cantor, a flavour not easily replicated by an English tenor. Gilchrist found plenty of anger for the motto phrase Go blind now, today', but allowed it to spill over into too much else. Final judgement must be reserved for a complete performance.
Sally Beamish's crafty Four Songs from Hafez suffered from over-elaboration of poetry that is already highly aromatic. But Nicola LeFanu's Alkman the Choirmaster, setting a John Fuller poem, evoked its early Greek subject's enthusiasm and regrets with a telling touch.
A TEENAGER who has spent years being the primary carer for his disabled mother has been nominated in our Community Pride awards.
George Wilkinson introduces the first in a series of three walks at Low Row in the Yorkshire Dales.
FOR the first time ever, my mobile phone stopped working. Just like that. The feelings of loss, isolation and, I’ll be brutally honest, panic were instant – and just as quickly replaced by the total shame of such dependency.
There’s more to Liverpool than the Beatles and a ferry, finds Maxine Gordon.
Hostas so often end up being eaten by snails, but Gina Parkinson decides to give them another try – armed with some coffee grounds.
Maxine Gordon pulls on her Stetson for a visit to York’s new Tex-Mex restaurant.
RICHARD FOSTER learns about an expert on the Middle East during a visit to a stately home in East Yorkshire.
A POSSE of Knights went to Haxby yesterday to open the new-look Co-op on Ryedale Court.
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