|
From Trumpet, BBCSO, Susanna Mälkki
BBC Proms 2009
Tim Ashley, The Guardian, Tuesday 4 August 2009
Susanna Mälkki's Prom with the BBC Symphony Orchestra opened with the premiere of From Trumpet by Ben Foskett. It is a piece of virtuosity and great charm, structured round a single rhythmic figure that accelerates and decelerates, attracting and shedding surface complexities as it goes. Three muted trumpets, swaggering and sinister, indicate changes of pace and mood before imposing a final stasis. Mälkki conducted it with grace and panache.
From Trumpet, BBCSO, Susanna Mälkki
BBC Proms 2009
Geoff Brown, The Times, August 4, 2009
With its obsessive rhythms (Beethoven 4), the finale provided another echo of the BBC commission by Foskett, a 32-year-old Brit of considerable imaginative reach and technical resources. Hes a refreshing voice, fed on the minimalists, with poetry as the dessert. At the beginning of From Trumpet the music is only glimpsed through fog. Clarity emerges with a top layer of brass, separating out the component notes of a splayed chord. Harmony and rhythm accelerate, pulled tighter and tighter until they form chugging pulses of different textures. The activity winds down to simplicity and a consonant ending. Thirteen happy minutes long, this was a bracing, constantly ear-tickling creation.
From Trumpet, BBCSO, Susanna Mälkki
BBC Proms 2009
Ivan Hewett, Telegraph, 03 Aug 2009
This Prom ran the whole gamut of orchestral sounds, from the mysterious veiled sonorities of Ben Foskett's brand-new From Trumpet through to the vast triumphal blaze of Berlioz's Te Deum ... Controlling all this was the vigorously decisive figure of the Finnish conductor Susanna Mälkki, dressed like a Presbyterian minister in severe black. She's a conductor who's made her name in contemporary music, so she's well used to bringing a forensic clarity to complex textures, and negotiating tricky changes of metre. All useful skills in Ben Foskett's oddly titled piece, which began by unfolding a sonorous chord with luxuriant slowness and then gradually changing it note by note.
The shade of the late, great Italian composer Luciano Berio hung over this seductive opening, but then the music leapt into new territory entirely, with hammered piano chords and layered patterns on timpani. Suddenly the "road movie" ambience of American minimalism was not so far away, but this too was abandoned for a new texture of chirruping sounds. Foskett has a nice way of offsetting a rigid "mechanistic" way of making a texture with surprise. And he's also good at insinuating elements of one section into another, which, on the surface, seems completely different which is why our ear accepts the change. One got the sense of a very striking and individual sensibility, which one day will shake off its formative influences.
From Trumpet, BBCSO, Susanna Mälkki
BBC Proms 2009
Barry Millington, Evening Standard 03.08.09
Ben Fosketts From Trumpet makes a virtue of elaborating an entire 12-minute work from a single rhythmic cell, at first so quietly as to test the concert manners of the large audience, but rising to a pounding, insistent climax.
Devoid of melodic interest, it makes its considerable impact by rhythmic, textural means.
From Trumpet, BBCSO, Susanna Mälkki
BBC Proms 2009
Colin Anderson, Classical Source, August 02, 2009
http://www.classicalsource.com/db_control/db_prom_review.php?id=7327
From Trumpet, BBCSO, Susanna Mälkki
BBC Proms 2009
Classical Iconoclast, 3 August 2009
http://classical-iconoclast.blogspot.com/2009/08/berlioz-beethoven-and-ben-foskett-prom.html
Violin Concerto, CD review, London Sinfonietta Label
Andrew Clements, The Guardian, 14 March 2008
The London Sinfonietta is selecting the works for its own-label series of premiere recordings very carefully. The latest trio, in recordings taken from the orchestra's concerts in London's Queen Elizabeth Hall, doesn't contain a single dud; Ben Foskett's remarkably assured concerto and Luke Bedford's wonderfully vivid song cycle are considerable achievements by any standards ... Foskett's 2004 Violin Concerto is a 15-minute single movement that etches the solo violin line on an ever-changing instrumental landscape, before pulling everything together in a satisfying way.
The Scarlet Pimpernel, London Children's Ballet, Peacock Theatre
AN Wilson, Evening Standard, May 2006
Ben Foskett's music was fantastic. The whole ballet was funny, moving, brilliantly paced...
The Scarlet Pimpernel, London Children's Ballet, Peacock Theatre
Graham Watts, Ballet.co, May 2006
There is very little that is childish about the London Childrens Ballet it is an impressively grown-up company with a developing maturity that is very evident from year to year...Ben Fosketts original score was a sympathetic and expressive setting for story-telling dance, providing a descriptive and melodic accompaniment to the choreography. It had a strong, thematic approach, giving vital continuity across a fragmented narrative of 14 scenes. In particular, Fosketts music created clearly identifiable themes to delineate the two principal characters (Sir Percy - the Pimpernel - and his wife, Marguerite). Given the number of characters on stage, this was essential...
Violin Concerto, Young Brits: BBC invitation concert, London Sinfonietta / Gould, Kok
LSO St. Lukes
Andrew Clements, The Guardian, Saturday January 29, 2005
The Sinfonietta had played Ben Foskett's single-movement Violin Concerto before, and, with Clio Gould again the soloist, its well-sustained trajectory seemed just as impressive on second hearing.
Violin Concerto, Young Brits: BBC invitation concert, London Sinfonietta / Gould, Kok
LSO St. Lukes
John Allison, The Times, 31/1/05
...and the Sinfonietta was right to revisit Ben Fosketts assured Violin Concerto, in which Clio Gould set up a concentrated dialogue with the orchestra.
Trying to see more, John Barker, Tim Sidford, Kirckman Concert Society Young Artists
Purcell Room, London
Stephen Pritchard, The Observer, Sunday September 26, 2004
The ink was barely dry on Ben Foskett's Trying to see More before it received its world premiere last week - indeed, it was so new he only thought of the title after the programme had gone to press.
Music this fresh fairly leaps off the page and in the hands of saxophonist John Barker and pianist Timothy Sidford, it achieved astonishing cohesion; rather more than the composer intended, judging from his programme notes. He planned a piece made of two ideas which play off each other, attempting compromise until breaking apart. Barker and Sidford work so seamlessly together that this tension was never really apparent. Instead, we heard an immensely enjoyable piece of intense rhythmic vitality and character.
Violin Concerto, London Sinfonietta / Gould, Knussen, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
By Keith Potter, Independent, 13 April 2004
Still, when they produce such a stimulating world premiere as that of Ben Foskett's Violin Concerto - performed with Clio Gould as soloist - then their value is quite obvious. Like so many of the composers the Sinfonietta plays these days, Foskett, who is 27 this year, has studied with Simon Bainbridge. His concerto is the result of another laudable side of the ensemble's activities, the Blue Touch Paper project, which allows works to be written under the guidance of established figures such as the Finnish composer Magnus Lindberg.
Foskett insisted, in a pre-concert talk, that he selected the violin as he knew less about stringed instruments and was thus taking on more of a challenge. And the concerto's opening gives the impression that we might be in for another hand-me-down response to Alban Berg's Violin Concerto, which has stalked many composers for more than 60 years.
But as the work develops, Foskett soon makes it clear that he knows exactly what he is doing. In the first half, a searing solo line of considerable intensity - magnificently etched by Gould - soars and dips above a simple but telling chordal accompaniment. It emphasises the lower registers in this ensemble of seventeen players, from which violins are banished. In the second half, the relationship between soloist and ensemble becomes more complex, even confrontational, and the music moves through a series of emotions. The line of tension is expertly maintained, right through to the terrifying climax and the final plunge into stillness. The reception from this audience of musical diehards was unusually warm.
Violin Concerto, London Sinfonietta / Gould, Knussen, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
David Murray, Financial Times, Tuesday 6th April, 2004
Gould found forceful eloquence in the domineering solo role of Foskett's Concerto. The orchestral accompaniment is largely derived from it, and much of that consists in sharp, abrasive punctuation. With "gathering momentum and intensity", as promised, this single 17-minute movement made a confident, formidable impression: slightly raw, full of promise.
Violin Concerto, London Sinfonietta / Gould Knussen, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
John Allison, The Times, 6th April, 2004
Working in collaboration, too, with the soloist and dedicatee, Clio Gould, Foskett has come up with a concentrated score that never loses direction, moving from stream of consciousness to something tightly argued.
It begins with the violin descending into a dark landscape. With very little break for the soloist, the music gathers intensity and momentum, building up ferociously before dissolving into sustained stillness and a Lindberg influence? an intense chorale.
Violin Concerto, London Sinfonietta / Gould, Knussen, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
Andrew Clements, The Guardian, Monday April 5, 2004
Ben Foskett's Violin Concerto is one of the first products of the Sinfonietta's Blue Touch Paper scheme, in which young composers are guided by established figures to a produce a work for the Sinfonietta. Foskett's single-movement concerto clothes a solo violin line (commandingly played by Clio Gould) in increasingly luminous and independent instrumental harmonies; the ideas are always striking, and the way the music exploits the changing relationship between the soloist and the ensemble is compelling.
Wind Quintet, Zephyr Ensemble of London, Park Lane Group Young Artists Concert, Purcell Room, London
Tom Service, Guardian, 13 January 2003
Ben Foskett's Wind Quintet was more ambitious in structure, with two short movements preceding an extended finale. The contrast between the acerbic first movement and the slow, undulating chords of the second was the catalyst for the energy of the third.
State Of The Nation/London Sinfonietta, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
Keith Potter, Independant, 2 May 2002
I also enjoyed Ben Foskett's "Es gibt einige hohe Wellen", a splendidly brutal exercise in reckless note- and chord-throwing.
Hornet, Andrew Mason, Park Lane Group Young Artists Concert, Purcell Room, London
Keith Potter, Independant, 17 January 2002
Mason, a dynamic player, made the stronger impression; he created a powerful impact immediately with Ben Foskett's new Hornet.
|
|